Hiwassee College

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hiwassee College is a private junior college located in Madisonville, Tennessee, USA. Founded in 1849, it is the oldest private two-year institution in the state of Tennessee. It has a long history of providing a quality education; the majority of its graduates go on to attend, and complete, a four-year degree at another institution.

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Hiwassee College's early history is linked very closely with the founding in 1826 of Tullagalla Academy, a school for boys, located in the Fork Creek Community some five miles from the site of the present campus. By 1845, the enrollment of the academy exceeded its capacity to accommodate the students so the school moved to the Bat Creek Campground and utilized the facilities available there. This area is located across the road from the present location of the Hiwassee campus.

In 1849, the College was organized, replacing and expanding the academy's program. The new institution was named Hiwassee, taken from the Cherokee word "ayuwasi," which means "meadow place at the foot of the hills" and is reflective of the region at the foothills of the Great Smoky Mountains where the campus is located. They selected as their first president Dr. Robert E. Doak, a 25 year old Presbyterian scholar. This act proclaimed to the entire region that the emphasis at the College was to be on Christian education and not on denominationalism.

Hiwassee College was chartered by the State of Tennessee in 1850 and thus began a long history of meeting the educational needs of young men and, later on, young women of the area. For many years Hiwassee College offered training beginning with elementary school and continuing through the Bachelor's degree level. At some periods in its history, the College granted Master's degrees. Currently, Hiwassee College offers programs of study leading to Associate's degrees.

Hiwassee is on probation with the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.

Although closely tied to the Methodist Church since its founding, it was not until 1908 that the Trustees of Hiwassee College and the Holston Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South entered into an agreement for joint operation of the institution. Hiwassee College came under the complete control and ownership of the Methodist Church-South in 1937, shortly before its reunion with its northern counterpart in 1939 Prior to 1980, the three United Methodist-related colleges in the Holston Conference (a geographic region that includes East Tennessee and small parts of southwest Virginia and north Georgia) were governed by a unified Board of Trustees. In 1980, the Board of Trustees established a separate Board of Governors for each institution, and by 1990, each of the three colleges operated under a separate, independent Board of Trustees.

Its campus has grown from the original seven acres donated by Reverend Daniel B. Carter to start the College to a campus comprised of eighteen buildings situated on 60 acres of a 40 acre tract of land located one mile north of the town of Madisonville. The College offers a variety of university-parallel and career/vocational programs leading to the Associate of Arts, Associate of Science, or Associate of Applied Science degree.

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