| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
College News | Association of Chiropractic Colleges chirocolleges.org | Spokane, WA, USA :: Meet Dr. Keith... ahaspokane.com | Profile (4827) Trial #1984, Morehouse School of Medicine,... centerwatch.com | Obama Picks Morehouse School of Medicine Grad as Surgeon General -- ACTSI actsi.org |
Coordinates: 33°44′48″N 84°24′55″W / 33.74667°N 84.41528°W
Morehouse College is a private, all-male, historically black college located in Atlanta, Georgia. It is one of three remaining traditional men's colleges in the United States, and a member of the Black Ivy League. Morehouse has a 61 acre campus and an enrollment of 3,000 students. The student-faculty ratio is 16:1 and 100% of the school's tenure-track faculty hold tertiary degrees. Along with Clark Atlanta University, Interdenominational Theological Center, Morehouse School of Medicine and nearby women's college Spelman College, Morehouse is part of the Atlanta University Center. Morehouse is one of two black colleges in the country to produce a Rhodes Scholar, and it is the alma mater of many African-Americans leaders, including Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., filmmaker Spike Lee, actor Samuel L. Jackson, Olympic gold medalist Edwin Moses, and the first African-American mayor of Atlanta, Maynard Jackson.
[edit] History
[edit] EstablishmentIn 1867, just two years after the American Civil War, the Augusta Institute was founded by William Jefferson White, an Augusta Baptist minister and cabinetmaker, with the support of the Rev. Richard C. Coulter, a former slave from Augusta, Georgia, and the Rev. Edmund Turney, organizer of the National Theological Institute for educating freedmen in Washington, D.C. [1] The institution was founded to educate African American men in theology and education and was located in Springfield Baptist Church, the oldest independent black church in the United States. The Institute’s first president was Rev. Dr. Joseph T. Robert (father of Brigadier General Henry Martyn Robert, author of Robert’s Rules of Order). [edit] Early yearsIn 1879, the institute moved to its own location and changed its name to the Atlanta Baptist Seminary. [1] It later acquied a 4-acre (1.6 ha) campus in downtown Atlanta. In 1885, Dr. Samuel T. Graves became the second president. That year the seminary moved to its present location, on land donated by John D. Rockefeller. In 1890 Dr. George Sale became the seminary’s third president, and in 1897 the school was renamed Atlanta Baptist College. [1] In 1906 Dr. John Hope became the first African-American president and led the institution’s growth in enrollment and academic stature. [1] He envisioned an academically rigorous college that would be the antithesis to Booker T. Washington’s view of agricultural and trade-focused education for African-Americans. In 1913, the smeinary was renamed Morehouse College, in honor of Henry L. Morehouse, corresponding secretary of the Northern Baptist Home Missions Society. [1] Morehouse entered into a cooperative agreement with Clark College and Spelman College in 1929 and later expanded the association to form the Atlanta University Center.[1] Dr. Samuel H. Archer became the fifth president of the college in 1931 and selected the school colors (maroon and white) to reflect his own alma mater, Colgate University. Dr. Benjamin Elijah Mays became president in 1940.[1] Mays, who would be a mentor to Martin Luther King, Jr., presided over the growth in international enrollment and reputation. During the 1960s, Morehouse students were actively involved in the civil rights movement in Atlanta.[1] Mays’ speeches were instrumental in shaping the personal development of Morehouse students during his tenure. In 1967, Dr. Hugh M. Gloster became the seventh president. The following year, the college’s Phi Beta Kappa Honors Society was founded. In 1975, Dr. Gloster established the Morehouse School of Medicine, which became independent from Morehouse College in 1981. [edit] Modern historyDr. Leroy Keith, Jr., was named president in 1987. In 1995, alumnus Dr. Walter E. Massey, became Morehouse’s ninth president. His successor, Dr. Robert Michael Franklin is the tenth President of the college. In 2006, Morehouse graduated 540 men, one of the largest classes in its history. [7] On May 16, 2008, Joshua Packwood became the first white valedictorian to graduate in the school's 141-year history.[8][9] In August 2008, Morehouse welcomed a total of 920 new students (770 freshmen and 150 transfer students) to its campus, one of the largest entering classes in the history of the school. [10] [edit] Administration and organization
Morehouse's official sister school Bennett College, is located in Greensboro, North Carolina. However some mistake its rather closely acquainted and physically approximate neighbor Spelman College as being such. This is largely due to the fact that Morehouse and Spelman have strong historical ties to one another and many of the men from Morehouse and women from Spelman have intermarried by tradition. [edit] CampusMorehouse is located on a 61 acres (25 ha) campus near downtown Atlanta.[5] [edit] Buildings
[edit] Monuments Obelisk in front of King Chapel dedicated to Howard Thurman, world famous theologian and civil rights leader. Several previous presidents of the college have grave sites on-campus to honor their legacies.
[edit] Academics
On average,at graduation, 97% of graduates are offered two or more jobs by Fortune 500 companies and private companies. Morehouse was ranked #1 three times in a row (2002–2004) as the best school for African Americans for undergraduate study by Black Enterprise Magazine. [12] The college was rated by The Wall Street Journal as #29 out of the top 50 "feeder schools" for elite graduate study in a 2003 study. [13][14] According to a 2007 joint publication by Newsweek and Kaplan, Inc., Morehouse College is one of the "25 Hottest Schools in America" and the "hottest men's college".[15] It was also ranked 14th in an annual list of Best Liberal Arts Colleges conducted by The Washington Monthly. [edit] Collections
Morehouse College is home to a 7,000-piece collection of original documents written by Martin Luther King, Jr. The set was valued by the Library of Congress at being worth between $28 to $30 million dollars and were originally scheduled by his family to be auctioned off to the general public in 2006, but private donors in Atlanta intervened and offered a pre-auction bid at $32 million. On June 29, it was announced by Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin, a key catalyst in the buyout, that a new civil rights museum would be built in the city to make the documents available for research, public access and exhibits. Coca Cola donated a land parcel valued at $10 million in order to assist with the development of the project. The collection includes King's 1964 Nobel Prize acceptance speech.[16][17][18][19] [edit] Student lifeMorehouse College offers organized and informal co-curricular activities including 78 student organizations, varsity, club, and intramural sports, and student publications.[20] [edit] Morehouse Marching BandThe Morehouse College Marching Band is known for their halftime performances which combine dance and marching with music from various genres, including rap, traditional marching band music, and pop music. They have performed at Super Bowl XVIII, the Today Show, and at Atlanta Falcons home games. [edit] Mock Trial AssociationIn 2005, Morehouse College became a member of the American Mock Trial Association (AMTA).[21] The school is one of only four competing teams to come from a historically black college and is also the only all-male team in the AMTA. In 2006, 2007, 2008, and 2009, Morehouse won their regional championship competitions, thereby receiving direct trips to the AMTA national championship competitions in Iowa, Florida, and Minnesota, respectively.[22] [edit] Glee ClubFounded in 1911, the Morehouse College Glee Club has a long and impressive history and performed at Martin Luther King Jr.'s funeral, President Jimmy Carter's inauguration, Super Bowl XXVIII, and the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta. The Glee Club's international performances include tours in Africa, Russia, Poland and the Caribbean. The group also appeared on the soundtrack for the movie School Daze, directed by Morehouse alum Spike Lee (Class of 1979). [edit] The Maroon Tiger newspaperThe college's weekly student-run newspaper is The Maroon Tiger. Originally founded in 1898 as The Athenaeum, it was renamed in 1925. The 2008-2009 staff sought to expand the newspaper into a news organization by creating Morehouse's first television news program, Tiger TV, and starting a new website at www.TheMaroonTiger.com.[23] [edit] National fraternities and honor societiesMorehouse College is home to several National Pan-Hellenic Council fraternities:
Other national fraternities and honor societies registered on campus are Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia,Phi Alpha Delta, The Tiger 6 Chapter of Groove Phi Groove Social Fellowship,Inc. Kappa Kappa Psi, Alpha Kappa Delta, Beta Kappa Chi, the Delta Chapter of Georgia Phi Beta Kappa, Golden Key, National Society of Collegiate Scholars, Phi Alpha Theta. Pi Delta Phi, Psi Chi, Sigma Delta Pi, Sigma Tau Delta[20] and Alpha Lambda Delta. [edit] Religious organizationsCampus religious organizations include the Atlanta University Center Catholic Student Coalition, King International Chapel Ministry, Martin Luther King International Chapel Assistants, King Chapel Choir, Muslim Students Association, New Life Inspirational Fellowship Church Campus Ministry, and The Outlet.[20] [edit] AthleticsIn sports, Morehouse College is affiliated with the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SIAC) and the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division II. The mascot is the Maroon Tiger. Morehouse College competes in football, baseball, basketball, cross country, tennis, track & field and golf. The Morehouse Tigersharks, as they're affectionately known, was once Morehouse's power house swim team. From 1958 till 1976 the swim team had 255 wins and only 25 losses, with over 15 SIAC championships, making it the winningest sports team in Morehouse history. [24] It had even beaten Emory University and Georgia Tech in dual meets in different seasons. The team appeared in Jet and Ebony Magazines, Black Sports, and Sports Illustrated throughout the 1960s and 1970s, and today is being considered as honorary inductees into the International Swimming Hall of Fame in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. Actor Samuel L. Jackson was once the team statistician and was an apprentice swimmer. Some of the swimmers had competed in NCAA and NAIA competition at various times throughout the team's history. The team was disestablished in 1976 and the funds were transferred to build the Morehouse School of Medicine. [edit] In popular culture
[edit] Dress codeMorehouse college operates a student dress code that prohibits students from cross-dressing, as well as wearing Grill (jewelry), pyjamas and do-rags, walking barefoot on campus or Sagging (fashion). This dress code is part of the Five Wells which holds that: Morehouse Men are "Renaissance Men with a social conscience and global perspective" who are: Well-Read, Well-Spoken, Well-Travelled, Well-Dressed and Well Balanced.[27] [edit] Notable alumni: Morehouse MenMain article: List of Morehouse College alumni Morehouse is one of two historically black colleges in the country to produce a Rhodes Scholar. The school's first Rhodes Scholar, Nima Warfield, was named in 1994, the second, Christopher Elders, in 2001. [28] A third, Oluwabusaya “Topé” Folarin, was named in 2004. Morehouse has been home to six Fulbright Scholars, Damon M. Lombard (1995), John Thomas (2004) and Jason T. Garrett (2006) Morgan C. Williams, Jr. (2006), Lasean Brown (2008), and Wendell H. Marsh (2009). [29] [edit] Bibliography
[edit] External links
[edit] References
Categories: Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference | Morehouse College | Historically black universities and colleges in the United States | Men's universities and colleges in the United States | Southern Association of Colleges and Schools | Universities and colleges in Georgia (U.S. state) | Schools in Atlanta, Georgia | Educational institutions established in 1867 | Oak Ridge Associated Universities | Council of Independent Colleges | National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |