College of Charleston

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College of Charleston
Image:CoCseal.gif

Motto: "Knowledge itself is liberty."
Established 1770
Type: Public university
President: Dr. P. George Benson
Staff: 836
Undergraduates: 9866
Postgraduates: 1454
Location Charleston, South Carolina, USA
Colors: Maroon and White           
Mascot: Cougar
Website: www.cofc.edu

The College of Charleston (CofC) is a public university located in historic downtown Charleston, South Carolina. The College was founded in 1770 and chartered in 1785, making it the oldest college or university in South Carolina, the 13th oldest institution of higher learning in the United States, and the oldest municipal college in the country. The founders of the college include three signers of the Declaration of Independence and three signers of the United States Constitution. It is said that the college was founded to, "encourage and institute youth in the several branches of liberal education." The College is in company with the Colonial Colleges as one of the oldest schools in the United States. Along with a group of other selective and innovative public liberal arts institutions, it is a member of the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges.

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In addition to its status as the oldest college or university in South Carolina, founded in 1770 and chartered in 1785, the College of Charleston is the 13th oldest institution of higher learning in the United States and the first municipal college in the country. The College is in company with the Colonial Colleges as one the original and foundational institutions of higher education in the United States. Its founders include three signers of the United States Declaration of Independence and three signers of the United States Constitution. The College's historic campus, which is listed on the U.S. Department of the Interior's National Register of Historic Places, forms an integral part of Charleston's colonial-era urban center.

The College of Charleston lies in the heart of historic downtown Charleston, roughly in the middle of the Charleston peninsula. Built on land given to the College's founders by Grace Episcopal Church, located to the south of the campus, the College originally held class in one of several buildings that have since been torn down. The oldest building on campus, the Bishop Robert Smith House, built in 1770, serves as the President's House. Randolph Hall was built in 1828 and is the oldest functioning college classroom building in the nation. Currently it houses the President's Office, Graduate Studies offices, and various others. Towell Library, located alongside Randolph Hall in the area known as the Cistern Yard, was built in 1855 and was the College's original library. Porter's Lodge was built in 1850 and originally functioned as the residence for the campus' porter, who was charged with the maintenance and upkeep of the College's facilities until the position was no longer needed soon after the Civil War. The College has twice served as barracks for American soldiers, once during the Civil War and again during World War I. Randolph Hall and Towell Library both exhibit damage from cannonfire from the Civil War. In 1886, Charleston experienced a massive earthquake, estimated to have been a 7.5 on the Richter Scale. The earthquake demolished most of the city, but the structures of the College survived relatively unscathed, though many structures maintain earthquake bolts that were believed to stabilize the buildings. In 1989, Hurricane Hugo took its toll on much of the South Carolina coast, devastating Charleston in particular. While many of the Live Oaks found around campus were damaged and removed during the cleanup, the rest of the campus was spared and few signs of the hurricane still exist.

The College became the nation's first municipally funded public university in 1826, and was incorporated into the South Carolina State College System in 1970. The College first admitted women in 1918, and African-Americans in 1968.

Although existing as a small liberal arts college for much of its early history, once it became a state supported institution in 1970 the size of the College of Charleston's faculty and student body expanded exponentially, transforming it from a small regional college of about 400 students to a national masters level university with a combined graduate/undergraduate enrollment of over 12,000. Despite this growth into a university, the institution still retains its historical name of "College of Charleston" and actively cultivates an identity as a liberal arts institution. The liberal arts heritage is reflected in the core curriculum, which includes a heavy emphasis on languages, literature, history, sciences, and the arts. Under President Leo Higdon, the decision was made to cap undergraduate enrollment at 10,000 students and increase the size of the College's tenure-track faculty. This was done in order to create and maintain an institution which could uniquely offer the best of a small elite liberal arts college, such as small class size and individual attention, with the faculty resources, research and curricular opportunities of a large research institution.

The College of Charleston today is nationally recognized both for its focus on undergraduate education and faculty research contributions. The College of Charleston is one of the nation's leading institutions for undergraduate education according to the Princeton Review; U.S. News and World Report regularly ranks the College of Charleston among the best southern masters level universities. As one of the leading institutions of higher education in the Southeastern United States, the College of Charleston is celebrated nationally for its focus on undergraduate education.

The College is nationally known for departmental strengths across its six academic divisions known as 'schools.' These are the School of the Arts, College of Charleston School of Business and Economics, School of Education, School of Humanities & Social Sciences, School of Languages, Cultures, & World Affairs and the School of Science & Mathematics.

The Classics, Ancient Greek, Latin, and Classical Civilization, originally formed the core curriculum at the College of Charleston at its founding in 1770. As the College's 'original' program, today the College's Department of Classics continues that legacy and boasts the one of the nation's best undergraduate programs in Classical Languages and Civilizations.

According to the 1970 legislative decree that incorporated the College of Charleston into the South Carolina system, the College was given a mandate to develop the state's flagship programs in those academic areas that capitalize on Charleston's and the Lowcountry's unique natural and cultural strengths: Marine Biology and Fine Arts. Today, the College's Grice Marine Laboratory is one of the Eastern Seaboard's leading research centers in the marine sciences. In addition, Grice supports the College's graduate and undergraduate programs in Marine Biology.

The College of Charleston hosts South Carolina's flagship programs in the Arts. The College of Charleston's Department of Art History is one of an elite few independent art history departments in North America and is the only department that specializes in undergraduate education of the three independent art history departments in the Southeastern United States. The department supports programs in Art History and Historic Preservation and Community Planning and its faculty contribute to interdisciplinary programs in Archaeology, Asian and Latin American Studies. With Charleston's wealth of resources in the performing arts to draw on, not least of which is Charleston's Spoleto Festival, the College's Theatre and Music departments form South Carolina's best undergraduate performing arts programs.

The Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture at the College of Charleston was established in 1985 and is the foremost research center of its kind in the region. From its inception, the Center has served as a source of community outreach on African-American issues. Between 1700 and 1800, at the height of the Atlantic Slave trade, 40% of Africans who were forcibly shipped to mainland North America, came to the shores of Charleston, South Carolina. The unparallel impact of the skill, talent and leadership of enslaved and free blacks, have produced an unprecedented history in Gullah and Sea Island culture, slavery, civil war and reconstruction, civil and women’s rights, education, business, and the arts. According to its mission statement, it is Avery’s mission to preserve this legacy.

In 1992 the University of Charleston, now called the Graduate School of the College of Charleston, was founded as the graduate program for the College. By 1999, the graduate program had over two thousand students. Today, the Graduate School of the College of Charleston offers sixteen degree and six certificate programs in addition to coordinating support for the College's many nationally recognized faculty research programs.

Although the core of the institution is in downtown Charleston, College of Charleston has a satellite campus in nearby North Charleston, used mostly by its graduate and continuing education programs; Grice Marine Laboratory is located at Fort Johnson on neighboring James Island, across from peninsular Charleston on the Ashley River side of Charleston Harbor. Most of the College's athletic teams train and compete at Patriot's Point Athletic Complex in Mount Pleasant, located next to the confluence of the Cooper River and Charleston Harbor.

On October 26, 2006, the College of Charleston Board of Trustees announced that Dr. P. George Benson would succeed Dr. Conrad Festa, the interim president, as President of the College of Charleston. Dr. Benson is only the 21st president in the college's over 225 year history. He assumed the presidency on February 1, 2007. Prior to becoming President of the College of Charleston, Dr. Benson served as dean of the Terry College of Business at the University of Georgia. He sits on numerous corporate boards and is an avid golfer. President Benson is a member of the board of directors of The Foundation for the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award. The Foundation is a nonprofit, private-sector organization that raises funds to endow the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award.

The school's athletic teams, which participate in the NCAA Division I Southern Conference, are known as the Cougars. While the College lacks a football program, the College's student fans are known for their fanatical support. The College's best-known athletic program is men's basketball. The men's basketball team won the NAIA national title in 1983 and made four trips to the NCAA Tournament (1994, 1997, 1998 and 1999) under the leadership of former head coach John Kresse, for whom their arena is named. The College also boasts the 2004, 2005, 2006, & 2007 SoCon Champion Baseball team, 2004 SoCon Championship Men's Soccer team, 2003 & 2005 SoCon Championship Softball team, 2001-2004 SoCon Championship Women's Volleyball team, men's and women's swimming, men's and women's cross country, women's track & field,equestrian team, women's basketball team, a coed and women's sailing team, and both men's and women's student rugby clubs. The sailing team competes in the South Atlantic Intercollegiate Sailing Association division and in 2006 the Cougars won the Intercollegiate Sailing Association National Championships, a regatta which they hosted. In 2006 the school's baseball team won the Southern Conference Baseball Tournament and the Lexington NCAA tournament regional, defeating Big East champion Notre Dame and SEC champion Kentucky in the process. Also in 2006, college basketball coaching legend Bobby Cremins returned to the coaching ranks after he accepted a job as the Cougars' head basketball coach just days after Winthrop University coach and former College of Charleston assistant Gregg Marshall reneged on an oral acceptance to coach the basketball team. Making Volleyball history, Frances Wheeler was recognized in 2006 as an all American Christian Athlete Scholar. In February 2007, the College broke ground on the Carolina First Center, a state-of-the-art, 5,000 seat basketball arena that will be home to the basketball squad. On November 20, 2007, Joe Hull,senior associate athletics director at the University of Maryland, was named director of athletics.

Two residence halls have been completed in the area enclosed between George St., St. Philips St. and Liberty St. Liberty Street Residence Hall is geared towards underclassmen and is similar to McAlister Residence Hall. The George St. Apartment Community is single occupancy and is geared towards upperclassman. It also contains a new dining hall, which is open to the public, that specializes in fresh food prepared at various stations. Retail space is privately rented on the bottom floor of the two buildings.

On October 19, 2007, the College broke ground on a new Science Center located at the corner of Calhoun and Coming Streets, on the site of the former K-Lot surface parking lot. The new 130,000 GSF facility is expected to cost $58 million dollars and is the "largest and most expensive construction project ever undertaken by the College," according to the SSM News newsletter of the School of Science and Math. The College is working with the architects of Ballinger, Inc. to design the structure. The existing Science Center will be renovated for Geology, Physics, Math, Computer Science and Psychology, and the projected costs of renovation is $25,000,000.

Other recently completed building projects include the new School of Education, Health, and Human Performance complex that opened in March 2007; the Marlene and Nathan Addlestone Library and the Business School’s Beatty Center, both of which opened in 2005.

Other projects in various stages of development include the Carolina First Center, a new basketball and volleyball arena scheduled to open in fall 2008, and the Marion and Wayland H. Cato Jr. Center for the Arts, scheduled to open in January 2009.

Because of the historic look of the campus, many movies and television shows have been filmed at the College of Charleston, including General Hospital, North and South, Cold Mountain, The Patriot, White Squall, O, and The Notebook. The most popular scene location is Randolph Hall. In 2004, the first televised debate between Senate candidates Jim DeMint and Inez Tenenbaum was filmed in Alumni Hall. ABC's The View and CNN's Crossfire also took up residence on the College of Charleston Cistern before the South Carolina Primary of the 2000 Presidential Election.

The College of Charleston's Department of Art History is one of an elite number of independent art history departments in the United States. It is the second largest in the Southeast after Emory University and among the leading undergraduate art history programs in North America.

The College of Charleston's Historic Preservation program is the largest undergraduate program of its kind in the country.

The English Department at the College of Charleston publishes Crazyhorse, a national literary magazine.

In 1971, the College of Charleston was listed on the U.S. Department of the Interior's National Register of Historic Places.

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