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Bluefield State University

Bluefield State University is a public historically black university (HBCU) in Bluefield, West Virginia. Despite being an HBCU, Bluefield's undergraduate student body is now over 80% white. The university is part of West Virginia's public university education system.

Bluefield State University
Former names
Bluefield Colored Institute (1895–1932)

Bluefield State Teachers College (1932–1943)

Bluefield State College (1943–2022)
MottoAccept The Challenge
TypePublic historically black university
Established1895; 128 years ago (1895)
PresidentRobin C. Capehart
Students1,301[1]
Location, ,
U.S.

37°15′54″N 81°14′24″W / 37.26500°N 81.24000°W / 37.26500; -81.24000
CampusBluefield (main campus), Beckley
Colors   
Blue & Gold
NicknameBig Blue
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IICIAA - Conference Carolinas
MascotSir Blue
Websitewww.bluefieldstate.edu

History edit

The Bluefield Colored Institute was founded in 1895 as a "high-graded school" for African Americans.[2] At that time, the West Virginia Constitution prohibited racially integrated public education. Bluefield was within 100 miles of 70% of the state’s African American residents. The school was located on a steep four-acre (0.0016 km2) site to the north side of the Norfolk & Western railroad tracks.

Principal Hamilton Hatter supervised the first class of 40 pupils. Nathan Cook Brackett, an Abolitionist and first president of Storer College, served as president of the board of regents.[3] Hatter oversaw the construction of Mahood Hall, the administrative building, as well as dormitories Lewis Hall and West Hall. Mahood Hall was named for State Senator William Mahood (R-Mercer County), who wrote the institute's sponsoring legislation.

In 1906, Hatter was succeeded by Robert P. Sims, who would lead the institute, then college, for three decades. In 1909, the institute became a normal school, adding the training of teachers to its curriculum. By 1920, enrollment climbed to 235, with summer sessions for teacher certification adding hundreds more. Campus growth followed enrollment gains, expanding to 23 acres and the addition of Payne and Conley Halls. Enrollment grew to more than six hundred on its "terraced hills."[citation needed]

The President's House, later renamed Hatter Hall, was built in 1930 and added to the National Register of Historic Places.[4]

In 1932, the State of West Virginia recognized the Institute's success, accredited its education curriculum, and changed its name to Bluefield State Teachers College.

Sims' successor, Henry Dickason, was an institute alumnus and president from 1936 to 1952. In 1943, the state again accredited an expanded curriculum and renamed the school Bluefield State College.

During the late 1960s, black students protested that the state was transforming the school from a traditional black college to a white commuter college. One of the allegations made was that black faculty and staff were being fired and replaced by less qualified white personnel.[citation needed] On November 21, 1968, the racial tensions culminated in the bombing of the gymnasium. A $5,000 reward was offered by Governor Hulett C. Smith. Ironically, the administration responded by immediately closing the dormitories, which housed a significant percentage of the college's out-of-state black student population, hastening the transition to a predominantly white college.[5]

Neither the city nor the college were isolated from the demonstrations and demands for civil rights that dominated much of the 1960s. African American students protested that the school administration was working actively to transform Bluefield State from a historic black residential college to a commuter college comprised predominantly of white students.[citation needed] Tension persisted, and on November 21, 1968, a bomb exploded in the gymnasium. No one was injured, but the damage was extensive. A $5,000 reward was offered by Governor Hulett C. Smith. College president Wendell Hardway responded by closing all dormitories immediately and permanently. Students returning from Thanksgiving break found themselves locked out. The actions accelerated the college’s transition to a majority white student body.[6][7][8][9]

Despite these changes, overall enrollment remained strong through the succeeding decades. In 2003, the West Virginia Legislature created a community college system offering two-year degrees at new institutions across the state. Among them was New River Community and Technical College. Bluefield State was required to transfer all its two-year programs, except engineering and nursing, to New River. This resulted in losing approximately half of the college's enrollment.[10] The succeeding years were of slow decline, with occasional calls from state legislators to merge the college with nearby Concord University.

In 2019, the board of trustees hired former West Liberty University president Robin Capehart as interim president.[11] Later that year, Capehart and Governor Jim Justice announced the return to a residential campus with the groundbreaking for the first residence hall since the 1960s.

In 2021, Bluefield State acquired the former Bluefield Regional Medical Center property, adding 68 acres to the campus and renamed the student facility Medical Education Center. Former patient rooms were converted to residences; a cafeteria and lounge areas were built in time for the 2021–22 school year. Enrollment continued to grow during that time.[12]

In 2022, the state's Higher Education Planning Commission approved the college's first master's degree program, a Master of Business Administration, and renamed the institution Bluefield State University.[13][14]

The university garnered national attention in 2022 after the university suspended the faculty senate and created a new review system for tenured faculty members; this was quickly followed by a vote of no confidence by the university's faculty. This prompted an investigation by the university's accreditor, the Higher Learning Commission (HLC), in September 2023. The commission's peer review team reported that the president and board of governors "do not operate with integrity in several academic and human resources functions," including accusations that the university president hired several faculty members without input from university faculty, that the president fired a staff member following their meeting with the peer review team, and that the university's governing board were "not making decisions in the best interest of the university". President Capehart resigned shortly after the report was delivered to the university.[15] The HLC peer review team also recommended that the commission require the university to provide additional information to justify their accreditation.[16]

Academics edit

The university is organized into six colleges/schools:

  • College of Arts and Sciences
  • W. Paul Cole, Jr. School of Business
  • College of Engineering Technology
  • College of Health Sciences
  • School of Criminal Justice
  • School of Education
2022 student body racial composition
Category Percent
White 75.9%
Black 20.1%
Hispanic 2.1%
*Other 1.1%
Non-Resident Alien 0.7%

*Note: This racial-ethnic group includes Asian, Native American or Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, and other racial or ethnic categories not explicitly listed in the table.

As of the 2022–2023 school year, the student body is 59.3% female and 40.6% male.[17]

Student life edit

Bluefield State became a residential university in 2021 for the first time since 1968.

Athletics edit

Bluefield State athletic teams are the Big Blue. There are 21 intercollegiate varsity sports and many intramural sports.[18]

Bluefield State belongs to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) at the NCAA Division II level, primarily competing in the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) since the 2023–24 academic year; its men's wrestling team is an affiliate of Conference Carolinas. Prior to this, Bluefield State competed as a D-II independent as well as an Independent in the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA) from 2013–14 to 2022–23, and as a member of the now defunct West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WVIAC) from 1955–56 to 2012–13.

In 2020, President Capehart announced the return of football to the athletics program for the first time since 1980. Eleven new sports were added as well.[19]

History edit

Sports have a prominent place in Bluefield State's past and recent history. Teams competed in the Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association—now the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA)—from 1932 to 1955. In 1955, the college joined the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WVIAC) and remained there until its dissolution in 2013. It competed as an Independent until 2023 when it was re-admitted into the CIAA.

The archives of the WVIAC are housed at Bluefield State’s Jefferson Library.

In 1927 and 1928, football teams (then the "Blue Devils") won Negro College Athletic Association national championships as announced by the Pittsburgh Courier. In 2020, football began its return to campus with the hiring of Head Coach Tony Coaxum. In 2021, the team played its first games in 41 years and finished the season with a 4–3 record. In 2022, the team played its second season as an independent and finished 4–4. In 2023, the Big Blue will compete in the CIAA for the first time in 70 years against other historically black colleges and universities.[20]

Men and women's basketball teams competed in the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WVIAC) from 1955 until its dissolution in 2013. The men’s teams were tournament finalists in 1987 and 1988. The women's teams won conference titles in 1985, 1987, 1990 and 1993. Additionally, they won tournament titles in 1985 and 1993 and were finalists in 1986, 1989, 1992 and 1994.

The men's golf team won a WVIAC championship in 2011. In 2021, it won the USCAA national championship.

The men's tennis team won a WVIAC championship in 2012. It won a NCAA Regional championship in 2021 and competed in the Division II Finals for the first time.

The women's volleyball team won the USCAA championship in 2022.

The men's and women's track & field teams both won the USCAA championship in 2023.

Notable alumni edit

References edit

  1. ^ As of fall 2022. "Enrollment" (PDF). West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission. Retrieved 20 March 2023.
  2. ^ Ambler, Charles H. (1951). A History of Education in West Virginia: From Early Colonial Times to 1949. Huntington, WV: Standard Printing and Publishing Company.
  3. ^ Brackett, Herbert Ierson (1907). Brackett Genealogy: Descendants of Anthony Brackett of Portsmouth and Captain Richard Brackett of Braintree. With Biographies of the Immigrant Fathers, Their Sons, and Others of Their Posterity. H. I. Brackett.
  4. ^ "National Register Information System". July 9, 2010.
  5. ^ "The Whitest Historically Black College In America". NPR.org. 18 October 2013. Retrieved 24 October 2015.
  6. ^ "The Whitest Historically Black College In America". NPR.org. 18 October 2013. Retrieved 24 October 2015.
  7. ^ "Bomb Explodes at Bluefield State College". archive.wvculture.org. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  8. ^ "Negro Leader At BSC Is Arrested Conspiracy Charged In Bombing". Bluefield Daily Telegraph. November 25, 1968.
  9. ^ "e-WV | Bluefield State University". www.wvencyclopedia.org. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  10. ^ "e-WV | Bluefield State University". www.wvencyclopedia.org. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  11. ^ "Report Urges Merging Governing Boards of 4 Colleges". West Virginia Public Broadcasting. Associated Press. 2018-07-05. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  12. ^ Telegraph, CHARLES BOOTHE Bluefield Daily (5 September 2021). "Bluefield State College sees large increase in fall enrollment". Bluefield Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  13. ^ Jenkins, Jeff (2022-05-12). "HEPC approves step toward university status for Bluefield State College". WV MetroNews. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  14. ^ "Bluefield State College in West Virginia Will Transition to University Status". The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education. 2022-06-03. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  15. ^ Davis, Steven Allen (November 25, 2023). "Report leads to retirement of Bluefield State president Capehart". The Parkersburg News and Sentinel. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  16. ^ Lederman, Doug (November 27, 2023). "Bluefield State President Retired After Accreditor's Critical Report". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved November 27, 2023.
  17. ^ "Data and Publication Center". West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  18. ^ "Intramurals | Bluefield State University". bluefieldstate.edu. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  19. ^ "Bluefield State Returns Football And 11 Additional Sports For 2021-2022 | Bluefield State University". bluefieldstate.edu. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  20. ^ Gaither, Steven J. (2022-12-08). "CIAA expected to add Bluefield State, cut ties with Chowan". HBCU Gameday. Retrieved 2023-05-09.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Official athletics website

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Not to be confused with the former Bluefield College now known as Bluefield University Bluefield State University is a public historically black university HBCU in Bluefield West Virginia Despite being an HBCU Bluefield s undergraduate student body is now over 80 white The university is part of West Virginia s public university education system Bluefield State UniversityFormer namesBluefield Colored Institute 1895 1932 Bluefield State Teachers College 1932 1943 Bluefield State College 1943 2022 MottoAccept The ChallengeTypePublic historically black universityEstablished1895 128 years ago 1895 PresidentRobin C CapehartStudents1 301 1 LocationBluefield West Virginia U S 37 15 54 N 81 14 24 W 37 26500 N 81 24000 W 37 26500 81 24000CampusBluefield main campus BeckleyColors Blue amp GoldNicknameBig BlueSporting affiliationsNCAA Division II CIAA Conference CarolinasMascotSir BlueWebsitewww wbr bluefieldstate wbr edu Contents 1 History 2 Academics 3 Student life 3 1 Athletics 3 1 1 History 4 Notable alumni 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe Bluefield Colored Institute was founded in 1895 as a high graded school for African Americans 2 At that time the West Virginia Constitution prohibited racially integrated public education Bluefield was within 100 miles of 70 of the state s African American residents The school was located on a steep four acre 0 0016 km2 site to the north side of the Norfolk amp Western railroad tracks Principal Hamilton Hatter supervised the first class of 40 pupils Nathan Cook Brackett an Abolitionist and first president of Storer College served as president of the board of regents 3 Hatter oversaw the construction of Mahood Hall the administrative building as well as dormitories Lewis Hall and West Hall Mahood Hall was named for State Senator William Mahood R Mercer County who wrote the institute s sponsoring legislation In 1906 Hatter was succeeded by Robert P Sims who would lead the institute then college for three decades In 1909 the institute became a normal school adding the training of teachers to its curriculum By 1920 enrollment climbed to 235 with summer sessions for teacher certification adding hundreds more Campus growth followed enrollment gains expanding to 23 acres and the addition of Payne and Conley Halls Enrollment grew to more than six hundred on its terraced hills citation needed The President s House later renamed Hatter Hall was built in 1930 and added to the National Register of Historic Places 4 In 1932 the State of West Virginia recognized the Institute s success accredited its education curriculum and changed its name to Bluefield State Teachers College Sims successor Henry Dickason was an institute alumnus and president from 1936 to 1952 In 1943 the state again accredited an expanded curriculum and renamed the school Bluefield State College During the late 1960s black students protested that the state was transforming the school from a traditional black college to a white commuter college One of the allegations made was that black faculty and staff were being fired and replaced by less qualified white personnel citation needed On November 21 1968 the racial tensions culminated in the bombing of the gymnasium A 5 000 reward was offered by Governor Hulett C Smith Ironically the administration responded by immediately closing the dormitories which housed a significant percentage of the college s out of state black student population hastening the transition to a predominantly white college 5 Neither the city nor the college were isolated from the demonstrations and demands for civil rights that dominated much of the 1960s African American students protested that the school administration was working actively to transform Bluefield State from a historic black residential college to a commuter college comprised predominantly of white students citation needed Tension persisted and on November 21 1968 a bomb exploded in the gymnasium No one was injured but the damage was extensive A 5 000 reward was offered by Governor Hulett C Smith College president Wendell Hardway responded by closing all dormitories immediately and permanently Students returning from Thanksgiving break found themselves locked out The actions accelerated the college s transition to a majority white student body 6 7 8 9 Despite these changes overall enrollment remained strong through the succeeding decades In 2003 the West Virginia Legislature created a community college system offering two year degrees at new institutions across the state Among them was New River Community and Technical College Bluefield State was required to transfer all its two year programs except engineering and nursing to New River This resulted in losing approximately half of the college s enrollment 10 The succeeding years were of slow decline with occasional calls from state legislators to merge the college with nearby Concord University In 2019 the board of trustees hired former West Liberty University president Robin Capehart as interim president 11 Later that year Capehart and Governor Jim Justice announced the return to a residential campus with the groundbreaking for the first residence hall since the 1960s In 2021 Bluefield State acquired the former Bluefield Regional Medical Center property adding 68 acres to the campus and renamed the student facility Medical Education Center Former patient rooms were converted to residences a cafeteria and lounge areas were built in time for the 2021 22 school year Enrollment continued to grow during that time 12 In 2022 the state s Higher Education Planning Commission approved the college s first master s degree program a Master of Business Administration and renamed the institution Bluefield State University 13 14 The university garnered national attention in 2022 after the university suspended the faculty senate and created a new review system for tenured faculty members this was quickly followed by a vote of no confidence by the university s faculty This prompted an investigation by the university s accreditor the Higher Learning Commission HLC in September 2023 The commission s peer review team reported that the president and board of governors do not operate with integrity in several academic and human resources functions including accusations that the university president hired several faculty members without input from university faculty that the president fired a staff member following their meeting with the peer review team and that the university s governing board were not making decisions in the best interest of the university President Capehart resigned shortly after the report was delivered to the university 15 The HLC peer review team also recommended that the commission require the university to provide additional information to justify their accreditation 16 Academics editThe university is organized into six colleges schools College of Arts and Sciences W Paul Cole Jr School of Business College of Engineering Technology College of Health Sciences School of Criminal Justice School of Education2022 student body racial composition Category PercentWhite 75 9 Black 20 1 Hispanic 2 1 Other 1 1 Non Resident Alien 0 7 Note This racial ethnic group includes Asian Native American or Alaska Native Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander and other racial or ethnic categories not explicitly listed in the table As of the 2022 2023 school year the student body is 59 3 female and 40 6 male 17 Student life editBluefield State became a residential university in 2021 for the first time since 1968 Athletics edit Bluefield State athletic teams are the Big Blue There are 21 intercollegiate varsity sports and many intramural sports 18 Bluefield State belongs to the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA at the NCAA Division II level primarily competing in the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association CIAA since the 2023 24 academic year its men s wrestling team is an affiliate of Conference Carolinas Prior to this Bluefield State competed as a D II independent as well as an Independent in the United States Collegiate Athletic Association USCAA from 2013 14 to 2022 23 and as a member of the now defunct West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference WVIAC from 1955 56 to 2012 13 In 2020 President Capehart announced the return of football to the athletics program for the first time since 1980 Eleven new sports were added as well 19 History edit Sports have a prominent place in Bluefield State s past and recent history Teams competed in the Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association now the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association CIAA from 1932 to 1955 In 1955 the college joined the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference WVIAC and remained there until its dissolution in 2013 It competed as an Independent until 2023 when it was re admitted into the CIAA The archives of the WVIAC are housed at Bluefield State s Jefferson Library In 1927 and 1928 football teams then the Blue Devils won Negro College Athletic Association national championships as announced by the Pittsburgh Courier In 2020 football began its return to campus with the hiring of Head Coach Tony Coaxum In 2021 the team played its first games in 41 years and finished the season with a 4 3 record In 2022 the team played its second season as an independent and finished 4 4 In 2023 the Big Blue will compete in the CIAA for the first time in 70 years against other historically black colleges and universities 20 Men and women s basketball teams competed in the West Virginia Intercollegiate Athletic Conference WVIAC from 1955 until its dissolution in 2013 The men s teams were tournament finalists in 1987 and 1988 The women s teams won conference titles in 1985 1987 1990 and 1993 Additionally they won tournament titles in 1985 and 1993 and were finalists in 1986 1989 1992 and 1994 The men s golf team won a WVIAC championship in 2011 In 2021 it won the USCAA national championship The men s tennis team won a WVIAC championship in 2012 It won a NCAA Regional championship in 2021 and competed in the Division II Finals for the first time The women s volleyball team won the USCAA championship in 2022 The men s and women s track amp field teams both won the USCAA championship in 2023 Notable alumni editMain category Bluefield State College alumniReferences edit As of fall 2022 Enrollment PDF West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission Retrieved 20 March 2023 Ambler Charles H 1951 A History of Education in West Virginia From Early Colonial Times to 1949 Huntington WV Standard Printing and Publishing Company Brackett Herbert Ierson 1907 Brackett Genealogy Descendants of Anthony Brackett of Portsmouth and Captain Richard Brackett of Braintree With Biographies of the Immigrant Fathers Their Sons and Others of Their Posterity H I Brackett National Register Information System July 9 2010 The Whitest Historically Black College In America NPR org 18 October 2013 Retrieved 24 October 2015 The Whitest Historically Black College In America NPR org 18 October 2013 Retrieved 24 October 2015 Bomb Explodes at Bluefield State College archive wvculture org Retrieved 2023 05 09 Negro Leader At BSC Is Arrested Conspiracy Charged In Bombing Bluefield Daily Telegraph November 25 1968 e WV Bluefield State University www wvencyclopedia org Retrieved 2023 05 09 e WV Bluefield State University www wvencyclopedia org Retrieved 2023 05 09 Report Urges Merging Governing Boards of 4 Colleges West Virginia Public Broadcasting Associated Press 2018 07 05 Retrieved 2023 05 09 Telegraph CHARLES BOOTHE Bluefield Daily 5 September 2021 Bluefield State College sees large increase in fall enrollment Bluefield Daily Telegraph Retrieved 2023 05 09 Jenkins Jeff 2022 05 12 HEPC approves step toward university status for Bluefield State College WV MetroNews Retrieved 2023 05 09 Bluefield State College in West Virginia Will Transition to University Status The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education 2022 06 03 Retrieved 2023 05 09 Davis Steven Allen November 25 2023 Report leads to retirement of Bluefield State president Capehart The Parkersburg News and Sentinel Retrieved November 27 2023 Lederman Doug November 27 2023 Bluefield State President Retired After Accreditor s Critical Report Inside Higher Ed Retrieved November 27 2023 Data and Publication Center West Virginia Higher Education Policy Commission Retrieved 2023 05 09 Intramurals Bluefield State University bluefieldstate edu Retrieved 2023 05 09 Bluefield State Returns Football And 11 Additional Sports For 2021 2022 Bluefield State University bluefieldstate edu Retrieved 2023 05 09 Gaither Steven J 2022 12 08 CIAA expected to add Bluefield State cut ties with Chowan HBCU Gameday Retrieved 2023 05 09 External links editOfficial website Official athletics website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bluefield State University amp oldid 1187175751 Athletics, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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