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Wikipedia

Franklin & Marshall College

Franklin & Marshall College (F&M) is a private liberal arts college in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. It employs 175 full-time faculty members and has a student body of approximately 2,400 full-time students. It was founded upon the merger of Franklin College and Marshall College in 1853.

Franklin & Marshall College
Former names
Franklin College (1787–1853)
Marshall College (1836–1853)
MottoLux et Lex (Latin)
Motto in English
Light and Law
TypePrivate liberal arts college
EstablishedJune 6, 1787; 235 years ago (1787-06-06) (predecessor)
June 7, 1853; 169 years ago (1853-06-07) (combined colleges)
Academic affiliations
Space-grant
Endowment$350.4 million (2020)[1]
PresidentBarbara K. Altmann[2]
Academic staff
207
Undergraduates2,283[3]
Location,
United States
CampusUrban 220 acres (89 ha)[3]
NicknameDiplomats
Websitewww.fandm.edu

The college offers various majors and minors across 62 fields of study, including the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, and other disciplines. The college also operates an advanced studies program in Bath, England. Its most popular majors are:[4]

Multi-/Interdisciplinary Studies (100)
Business Administration & Management (57)
Economics (41)
Biology/Biological Sciences (39)
Political Science & Government (36)
Behavioral Sciences (32)

All students are undergraduates, and nearly all live on campus. The college is a top producer of Fulbright Fellows.

Statistics

Rankings and reputation

In the U.S. News & World Report annual college rankings for 2022, Franklin and Marshall College tied for 42nd in National Liberal Arts Colleges, 44th in Best Undergraduate Teaching, 98th in Top Performers on Social Mobility, and 31st in Best Value Schools.[5] In the similar Forbes rankings, Franklin and Marshall ranked 134th in overall top colleges, 74th in private colleges, 29th in Liberal Arts Universities, and 54th in the Northeast.[6] Washington Monthly ranked Franklin and Marshall 35th in their list of Liberal Arts Colleges.[7]

Admissions

Franklin and Marshall's admissions process is rated as "more selective" by U.S. News & World Report. For the class of 2025, F&M received 7,720 applications and had an acceptance rate of 38%.[5]

Franklin and Marshall College Campus Historic District
 
Shadek-Fackenthal Library (1934-35), the youngest building in the district
 
 
 
 
LocationCollege Avenue, Lancaster, Pennsylvania
Area23 acres (9.3 ha)
ArchitectDixon, Balbirnie & Dixon; et al.
Architectural styleGothic Revival, Tudor Revival
NRHP reference No.03001190[8]
Added to NRHPNovember 21, 2003

History

Franklin College (18th century)

Franklin College was chartered on June 6, 1787, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, on the site of a former brewery.[13] It was named for Benjamin Franklin, who donated £200 to the new institution.[14] Founded by four prominent ministers from the German Reformed Church and the Lutheran Church, in conjunction with numerous Philadelphians, the school was established as a German college whose goal was "to preserve our present republican system of government," and "to promote those improvements in the arts and sciences which alone render nations respectable, great and happy." Its first trustees included five signers of the Declaration of Independence, two members of the Constitutional Convention and seven officers of the Revolutionary War.[15]

The school's first classes were taught on July 16, 1787, with instruction taking place in both English and German, making it the first bilingual college in the United States.[16][citation needed]

The first class consisted of 78 men and 36 women; Franklin was the first college in the United States to accept female students. "However, the coed policy was soon abandoned. Coeducation was not revived at the College for another 182 years."[17]

In July 1789, Franklin College went into debt because its annual tuition of four pounds was not enough to cover operating costs. Enrollment dwindled to just a few students and eventually the college existed as nothing more than an annual meeting of the board of trustees. In an effort to help the ailing school, an academy was established in 1807. For the next three decades, Franklin College and Franklin Academy managed to limp along financially, with instructors supplementing their income with private tutoring.[16][citation needed]

Marshall College (19th century)

Having grown from a Reformed Church academy, Marshall College opened in 1836 in Mercersburg, Pennsylvania.[18] The school was named for the fourth Chief Justice of the United States John Marshall, who had died the previous year. It was founded with the belief that harmony between knowledge and will was necessary to create a well-rounded person.

During its first year, 18 students were taught by Frederick Augustus Rauch and his assistant, Samuel A. Budd. Rauch, an acclaimed young scholar and theologian from Germany who authored the first American textbook in psychology, also served as the college's president.[citation needed]

The school's small faculty grew in both size and status with the addition of John Williamson Nevin and another German scholar, church historian Philip Schaff. Nevin became the college's president upon Rauch's sudden death in 1841.[citation needed]

Life at Marshall College was regimented. Students were required to attend morning prayers—sometimes as early as 5 a.m.—and were expected to study in their rooms for six hours a day. In addition, they were forbidden to associate with people of questionable moral character.[citation needed]

Marshall College quickly gained national recognition and attracted students from a large geographical area, with some coming as far away as the West Indies. However, despite being initially well-funded, Marshall College began to experience financial difficulties of its own. By the late 1840s, financial support and enthusiasm among the local community had virtually disappeared and the school was in danger of closing its doors permanently.[citation needed]

In 1835, the school's Debating Society was renamed Diagnothian Literary Society at the suggestion of seminary student Samuel Reed Fisher. That June, Diagnothian was divided into two friendly rivals to encourage debate. Diagnothian retained its original name, while the new society was named Goethean, in honor of German philosopher and poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe. The two organizations sponsored orations and debated politics, philosophy and literature. They merged in 1955, but became separate entities again in 1989. The Diagnothian Society is the oldest student organization on campus.[citation needed]

Merger

On December 6, 1849, Franklin College and Marshall College began to consider merging as a way to secure the future of both institutions. Three years later, on June 7, 1853, the combined college was formally dedicated at Lancaster's Fulton Hall. The merger created an all-male Reformed Church institution that combined the resources of both schools. James Buchanan, four years prior to becoming the 15th President of the United States, was named president of the first Franklin & Marshall board of trustees.

The college's first two presidents, Emanuel Vogel Gerhart, a Marshall College graduate, and Nevin struggled to keep the young school afloat with an inadequate endowment. The hope of creating a reputable liberal arts institution fueled their efforts to push on. "No second- or third-rate school will do," said Nevin at the formal dedication of the united college. "We must either have no college at all or else have one that may be in all respects worthy of the name."[citation needed]

The citizens of Lancaster agreed to donate $25,000 towards the construction of a building for the merged college. A site on the east end of the city was proposed near where the new Lancaster County Prison was constructed in 1851. Two parallel streets in the area were renamed, one for Franklin and one for Marshall.[16] However, Buchanan ultimately rejected the proposal, saying "I do not think the best location for a literary institution should be between a court house and a jail." Instead, Buchanan and the board selected a site at the northwestern end of Lancaster. Known locally as "Gallows Hill," it was the former site of Lancaster's public executions and the highest point of ground in city. At the laying of the building's cornerstone in 1853, Henry Harbaugh, a Marshall College graduate and pastor of the Reformed Church of Lancaster noted that the city's lowest point was the prison. Harbaugh stated: "Thank God! The College stands higher than the jail. Education should be lifted up and let crime sink to the lowest depths!" The distinctive, tall-towered structure, designed in the Gothic Revival style, was dedicated on May 16, 1856, as "Recitation Hall." Recitation Hall came to be known as "Old Main" and the ground as "College Hill".[19]

Franklin and Marshall College took as its motto the Latin phrase Lux et Lex, which translates in English to "Light and Law". This reversed the Marshall College motto Lex et Lux. While legend has it that the switch was the result of an error by an engraver, it has since been suggested that the words deliberately reflect its namesakes Benjamin Franklin ("light") and John Marshall ("law").

The college seal depicts profiles of Franklin and Marshall looking to the left. It has been suggested that this represents the two leaders looking westward to the future expansion of the United States. Despite his nominal secondary priority, John Marshall is on the left of the seal and Benjamin Franklin is on the right. But Franklin's entire head is shown, while Marshall's profile is cut off and far in the background. Speculation has suggested that this demonstrates an unspoken tendency to favor Franklin's legacy over Marshall's. This preference became explicit when the school celebrated Benjamin Franklin's 300th birthday but ignored John Marshall's 250th birthday during consecutive semesters of the 2005–2006 academic year. The school recognized Marshall's milestone birthday only after a petition was signed by a significant portion of students and faculty.[citation needed]

Old Main, Goethean Hall, and Diagnothian Hall were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975.[8]

Late 19th century

In 1872, the Franklin and Marshall Academy, an all-male prep school, opened on campus. When it closed in 1943, it was the last prep school in America to be directly affiliated with a private college or university. The academy's first building, East Hall, was constructed in 1872. A second and larger building, Hartman Hall, replaced it in 1907. Both buildings were used by the college after the academy folded. Hartman Hall was demolished in 1975 followed by East Hall in 1978.

College Days, the first student newspaper, began publication in 1873. Later student newspapers included The College Student (1881–1914), The F&M Weekly (1891–1915), The Student Weekly (1915–1964), The Blue and The White (1990–1992), and The College Reporter (1964–present).

Oriflamme, the Franklin and Marshall College yearbook, was established in 1883.

In 1887, the centennial celebration of Franklin College was held. By then, over 100 students were enrolled at F&M.

1899 saw the formation of the college's first theatre group, the Franklin & Marshall Dramatic Association. The next year, it was renamed the Green Room Club. The club performed plays at Lancaster's Fulton Opera House. Because the college admitted only men, the female roles were played by local actresses. In 1937, the Green Room Theatre opened on campus. F&M alumni who have performed on the Green Room stage include Oscar-winning film director Franklin J. Schaffner and actors Roy Scheider and Treat Williams.

20th century

 
Old Main, Franklin & Marshall College, c. 1910

The college grew rapidly after World War I. Enrollment rose from around 300 students in 1920, to over 750 by 1930. In 1924, the architectural firm of Klauder and Day presented a master campus plan in the Colonial Revival style. Dietz-Santee dormitory, Meyran-Franklin dormitory, the Mayser Physical Education Center, and Hensel Hall were all completed within three years. Two additional dormitories were planned, but never constructed.

The sesquicentennial celebration of Franklin College was held in October 1937. Student enrollment by then was 800. A commemorative plaque celebrating the sesquicentennial and the signing of the United States Constitution was presented to the college by the Lancaster County Historical Society.

In 1939, the school began an aviation program in the new Keiper Liberal Arts Building. The Aeronautical Laboratory eventually became a government-sponsored flight school with 40 faculty members. Two airplanes were disassembled, moved into the building and reassembled on the third floor as flight simulators.

During World War II, Franklin and Marshall College was one of 131 colleges and universities that adopted the V-12 Navy College Training Program offering students a path to a Navy commission.[20]

By 1945, with most young men in the armed services, the college population dwindled to just under 500 students and 28 faculty members. The end of the war brought an influx of students pursuing degrees under the G.I. Bill. By 1946, enrollment had swelled to over 1,200 students (including four women in the pre-med program), causing a sudden critical shortage of faculty.

The 1950s and 1960s brought more college expansion and construction, including North Museum (1953); Marshall-Buchanan Residence Hall (1956), Appel Infirmary (1959), Schnader Residence Hall (1959), Mayser Physical Education Center (1962), Benjamin Franklin Residence Halls (1964), Pfeiffer Science Complex (now Hackman Physical Science Laboratory) (1967), Grundy Observatory (1967), Whitely Psychology Laboratory (1968), and Thomas Residence Hall (1968).

Like other academic institutions in the 1960s, Franklin and Marshall endured student protests during the Civil Rights Movement and the Vietnam War. In April 1961, students rioted in front of the President's house and Hensel Hall, burning effigies and college property in protest of administration policies.[citation needed]

Martin Luther King Jr. visited the campus on December 12, 1963, three weeks after the assassination of John F. Kennedy, and spoke on civil rights to an overflow crowd of more than 4,000 in Mayser Center, the school's gymnasium.[21]

In 1965 Robert Mezey, a 30-year-old visiting English instructor and poet, spoke on campus against the Vietnam War, and traveled to Washington, DC to march against the conflict. When he was accused of urging students to burn their draft cards, he was suspended with pay for a month while the college investigated. The incident generated controversy in the local press, with some residents ordering him to "get the hell out of Lancaster" and "go to Russia." Though Mezey was reinstated, he left the college the following spring. This became known as the "Mezey Affair."[22]

In the spring of 1969, black students protested the final examination of the history course "The Black Experience in America." Demanding an apology from the faculty for exploitation and an "A" in the course, the students argued that no white man can test them on their "blackness." The day before the exam, the professors agreed to the apology, but insisted that the students take the final exam. On May 22, the day of the exam, 40 black students—many of whom were not enrolled in the course—blocked the entrance to the exam room in Old Main. The professors attempted to hand out the exam, but the protesters confiscated them. Retreating to Goethean Hall next door, the professors and staff met to evaluate the situation. The protesters followed them to the building, blocked all doors and exits and held them hostage, declaring that they would not release the faculty members until they received an apology and immunity from punishment. The standoff lasted until midnight, when the professors agreed to allow the students to grade themselves. The students relented and released the hostages. The college's Professional Standards Committee later overturned the decision, declaring that the professors must grade their students.[citation needed]

In 1969, Franklin and Marshall College ended its formal affiliation with the United Church of Christ, becoming a secular school.

Franklin College had enrolled female students during its first few years in the eighteenth century, to its academy for teenagers. Franklin and Marshall College was an all-male institution. Women were permitted to attend summer school classes at F&M beginning in 1942. Continuing a trend at gender exclusive schools across the country, the Board of Trustees announced on January 17, 1969, that it had voted to admit women to F&M, a decision that was supported by male students. In the fall of 1969, 82 freshman women and 34 female transfer students were enrolled in F&M's first coeducational class.

In 1970, F&M students protested the administration's failure to rehire popular sociology instructor Anthony Lazroe and history instructor Henry Mayer. The protest, known as the "Lazroe-Mayer incident," culminated in an East Hall sit-in on April 30, where students took over the building for several hours.

On September 17, 1970, the Herman Art Center (named after Jacob Leon Herman, Class of 1916) was dedicated as part of Convocation, during which painter Jim Dine and sculptor Chaim Gross were awarded honorary degrees. The building was designed by Fisher, Nes and Campbell of Baltimore, MD, for the studio art program, but only half of the original design was constructed due to lack of funds.

In 1976, the Steinman College Center was constructed. The building—designed by Minoru Yamasaki, architect of New York's World Trade Center—originally housed the campus bookstore. Today it houses the College Reporter, the Oriflamme Yearbook, the College Entertainment Committee, the Phillips Museum of Art, Pandini's (a restaurant), the campus radio station WFNM, and a post office.

On April 29, 1976, the Green Room Theatre staged the world premiere of the John Updike play Buchanan Dying, about former President James Buchanan, a Lancaster resident and former president of the board of trustees. The production was directed by Edward S. Brubaker and starred Peter Vogt, an F&M alumnus. After the premiere, a reception was held at Wheatland, Buchanan's Lancaster residence.

On March 28, 1979, the Three Mile Island nuclear reactor in nearby Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, experienced a partial meltdown, forcing the college to close briefly.

The college prospered during the 1980s. Construction projects initiated during the decade included Hartman Green (1982), French House (1984), Murray Arts House (1984), Ice Rink (1984), Spaulding Plaza (1985), and the Other Room Theatre (1985). Major renovations and expansions included Fackenthal Library (1983, renamed Shadek-Fackenthal Library, currently over 510,000 volumes), Stahr Hall (1985, renamed Stager Hall, 1988), the Black Cultural Center (1986), and Weis Residence Hall (1989).

On June 6, 1987, Franklin and Marshall College celebrated its bicentennial.

The 1990s brought a major expansion to the north side of campus with the construction of College Square in 1991. The multi-use complex houses a bookstore, laundromat, video store, restaurants and a food court. Other buildings from the decade include International House (1990), Martin Library of the Sciences (1990, currently over 61,000 volumes), and the Alumni Sports and Fitness Center (1995).

21st century

At the start of the 21st century, the college continued to grow with the addition of the Barshinger Center for Musical Arts in Hensel Hall (2000), President's House (built 1933, purchased by the college in 2002), Roschel Performing Arts Center (2003), Writer's House (2004), College Row Apartments (2007) which included apartment style living for upper-classmen with retail space on ground floors, the renovated Klehr Center for Jewish life (2008), and the Ann & Richard Barshinger Life Sciences & Philosophy Building (2007).

In 2003, the National Park Service established the Franklin and Marshall College Campus Historic District, listing 14 buildings (including Old Main, Goethean Hall, and Diagnothian Hall, previously listed in 1975) and three architectural features.[23]

On January 19, 2006, the college celebrated the tricentennial of Benjamin Franklin's birth. Franklin scholar Walter Isaacson gave a lecture, and a full-page ad praising Franklin and promoting the college was purchased in The New York Times.

On March 10, 2010, it was announced that then current president John Fry would be leaving the college to become the president of Drexel University on August 1, 2010. The college immediately began a search for a new president for the fall semester.[24] Alumnus John Burness took a one-year leave from his job at Duke University as senior vice president for public affairs and government relations to head the college as interim president.[25]

On November 16, 2010, Daniel R. Porterfield was announced as the new president, effective March 1, 2011. Porterfield came to F&M from Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., where he served as a senior vice president. He became the 15th president in the college's history.[26]

Since 2011 hundreds of talented, underserved high school students from across the country have taken part in F&M College Prep, a summer immersion program that offers an introduction to college life. Each of these participants have gone on to college, and more than 90% have gone on to enroll at four-year colleges, including Harvard, Brown, Stanford, Georgetown, and Bucknell universities, the University of Texas-Austin, Pomona College, Trinity College, Spelman College, and Franklin & Marshall.[27] The Office of Student and Post-Graduate Development offering life skills workshops, job-search boot camps for seniors and recent grads, on-campus recruiting and alumni programming, opened in 2012 and enjoys wide support from students and alumni.[28] The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation awarded F&M a $700,000 grant for its Faculty Center, which was launched in 2013 to improve support for faculty in their roles as researchers and educators.[29]

On May 1, 2014, Franklin & Marshall College was named as one of 55 colleges under review or investigation by the U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights, for their policies or practices for handling sexual assault reports.[30] Prior to the public announcement, President Porterfield sent an email to address the impending OCR "fact-finding investigation."[31]

Presidents

Franklin College:

Marshall College:

Franklin and Marshall College:

Athletics

Sports have been an active part of Franklin and Marshall since its inception. The college's sports teams are called the Diplomats. Many of the teams compete in the Centennial Conference. Men's intercollegiate competition is in fourteen sports: baseball, basketball, cross country, football, golf, lacrosse, soccer, squash, swimming, tennis, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field, wrestling, and rowing. Women's intercollegiate competition is in fourteen sports: basketball, rowing, cross country, field hockey, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, squash, swimming, tennis, indoor track and field, outdoor track and field, and volleyball. F&M competes in NCAA Division III for all varsity sports except wrestling, which is Division I, and men's and women's squash, which are nondivisional.[citation needed]

The Franklin & Marshall Diplomats football program was first was organized in 1887 by Seminary student Miles O. Noll. Franklin and Marshall was defeated 9–0 by the York YMCA. Later that year, the program played a re-match and lost again, this time by score of 6–4.[32] Frank Mount Pleasant became the head football coach in 1910.

Professor Charles W. Mayser founded the F&M wrestling team in 1923, and early 1924 saw the college's first wrestling match as the Blue & White defeated Western Maryland College 24–5. The Diplomat grapplers finished their maiden season with a 4–1 record. F&M wrestling competes in the EIWA and is[when?] the only Division III school to compete in Division I wrestling.[citation needed]

In 1992, F&M became a charter member of the Centennial Conference, an athletic conference of 11 mid-Atlantic institutions that compete in 22 sports in the NCAA's Division III. The other founding members of the conference are Bryn Mawr College, Dickinson College, Gettysburg College, Haverford College, Johns Hopkins University, Muhlenberg College, Swarthmore College, Ursinus College, Western Maryland College, (renamed McDaniel College) and Washington College.[citation needed]

The men's basketball team has reached the NCAA Division III Final Four on five occasions (1979, 1991, 1996, 2000, 2009), appearing in the national championship game in 1991. The men's basketball team has been nationally ranked on a frequent basis since the late 1970s, including No. 1 in Division III at some point during seven different seasons. Head coach Glenn Robinson is the career leader in wins in Division III. Robinson has been listed as one of the top 100 college basketball coaches of all-time.[33]

Other successful athletic teams at F&M include men's soccer, men's and women's swimming, baseball, and squash. They all traditionally compete for conference championships and have been ranked high nationally. In 2008, the men's swimming team won the Centennial Conference championships and the women's swimming team placed second.[34][35] At that championship, Thomas Anthony Grabiak Jr. of F&M set Centennial Conference championship meet records in the 100 and 200 yd breaststroke events.[36] Men's squash consistently maintains a top 20 Division I national ranking. In 1987 the men's squash team finished 15-1 and achieved a #2 national ranking led by four time all-American Morris Clothier. In 1988, the men's lacrosse team finished the season 13-3 and played in the USILA national semifinals.[citation needed]

Club sports

F&M also boasts several student-run clubs, most notably men's and women's rugby, both of which have become serious contenders for regional, and national championships each season and which compete in the Eastern Pennsylvania Rugby Union. Ultimate frisbee is also a popular club sport on campus, fielding both a men's and a women's team. In 2009, the college water polo team was revived and currently competes in the American Water Polo League and the Collegiate Water Polo League.[37]

Sponaugle–Williamson Field

Sponaugle-Williamson Field
 
 
LocationHarrisburg Pike
Lancaster, PA 17604-3003
OwnerFranklin & Marshall College
OperatorFranklin & Marshall College
Capacity4,000
SurfaceKentucky bluegrass
Construction
Broke ground1920
Opened1920
Tenants
F&M Diplomats (NCAA)

Sponaugle–Williamson Field is a stadium for the outdoor athletic teams of the college. It was built in 1920 as Williamson Field, named after S. Woodrow Sponaugle, who coached football and basketball and was the athletic director at F&M for 15 years. He shares the stadium's dedication with Henry S. Williamson, who was a trustee of the college from 1894 to 1917.[38]

Shadek Stadium

Shadek Stadium is used for football and lacrosse. Construction began in the fall of 2016 and ended in the fall of 2017. The stadium was named after the Shadek family, a family prominent at the school. The turf field in the stadium, Gilburg Field, is named after football player and former F&M coach Tom Gilburg. In the first football game played in the stadium, the Diplomats defeated Centennial Conference rivals Dickinson College 56–0.[39]

Greek system

Chi Phi, founded on December 1, 1854, remains the only fraternity at F&M with a fraternity house actually on the campus grounds. In 1929, through a special lease agreement with the college, the chapter built its house at 603 Race Avenue. The house was dedicated and opened in 1929, during the chapter's 75th anniversary celebration. During World War II, with school and fraternity attendance down, the house was converted to a temporary infirmary. In 1998, due to a series of disagreements with the college, the lease was terminated and the fraternity was evicted. On February 7, 2001, after three years, Chi Phi renegotiated a new lease with F&M. They reoccupied the house the following August.

In 1978, the school's first sorority, Sigma Sigma Sigma, was chartered. In 2005, the chapter became inactive.

In April 1988, the college's board of trustees voted to no longer officially recognize the school's fraternities and sororities. This was known as "derecognition." At the time, three of the school's fraternities had recently lost their national charters due to various offenses. In an effort to repair the system, the college administration proposed eight specific reforms to the Greek Council, which were ultimately rejected by all of the organizations. The result was derecognition. This was highly unpopular with the student body, but it served to remove the college from any liability associated with hazing and underage alcohol abuse, issues that were in the national public eye at that time. The Greek system continued, albeit without financial or administrative support from the college. After several years, a small number of fraternities struggled with health code violations, fires, and one accidental alcohol-related death. Owing to several factors, including dwindling financial support from fraternity and sorority alumni and legitimate concerns about student academics, health and safety, the college announced on May 19, 2004, that it would reinstate a new, revised Greek system beginning on September 1, 2004, after a 16-year absence.[40]

As part of the new agreement between the school's Greek organizations and the administration, fraternity and sorority houses are required to submit to weekly "life safety" inspections by school officials, and inspections by the local fire department, police department, and office of public health conducted once per semester. An Inter-Fraternity Council consisting of representatives from all fraternities and advised by a member of the faculty, as well as a Greek Council consisting of members of all Greek organizations (male and female), similarly advised by a faculty member, were re-established to deal with issues facing the Greek community and advising the administration on Greek issues.

As recently as the fall of 2008, relations between the administration and the Greek system were strained. The administration placed a month-long moratorium on all Greek social events. During this period, the Interfraternity Council revised protocols governing parties, and the revisions were approved by the administration resulting in the lifting of the moratorium, but the administration committed to more sternly enforcing the newly agreed-upon rules. There were also tensions between some members of the Greek system and Lancaster City, arising chiefly from incidents of crime.

Concerns over the condition of Greek housing has led the administration and Greek organizations to examine different possibilities for improving the quality of housing options in order for such houses to receive continued support and approval from the college. In some cases, the result has been the temporary closure of Greek housing until the buildings can be brought up to school and town safety standards.

Greek life is a major part of F&M's community. As of the spring of 2014, 43.7% of the F&M student body are members of the Greek Community.[41]

List of fraternities

  • ΧΦ Chi Phi, Zeta Chapter, fall of 1854 (currently inactive)[42]

List of sororities

Notable alumni

Clothing company

In 1999, a company based in Verona, Italy, began producing items of clothing in a vintage 1950s collegiate-style with the words "Franklin and Marshall" on them. F&M alumni began to report seeing F&M merchandise for sale in Europe, which puzzled the college.[45]

In 2001, Tim McGraw posed for publicity photos wearing a "Franklin Marshall Wrestling" T-shirt,[46] one of which was included in the CD booklet for his album Set This Circus Down. When many asked Franklin & Marshall College about its nonexistent connection to the singer, the college investigated and discovered that the Franklin Marshall Clothing company was using its name without permission.[47] In 2003, the college licensed the name to the company so it could sell its products, many of which omit Franklin & Marshall's ampersand, in the United States.[45][47]

The clothing company has stated in news reports that its designs are "inspired by the American Vintage College spirit, as exemplified by Franklin & Marshall College."[48] Most of its products are made in Italy and are much more expensive than the Champion-produced licensed apparel sold by the college's bookstore. As of 2011 the company has stores in six cities: Athens, Dubai, Milan, Tokyo, and Paris, and also sells through high-end stores like Harrods in Britain. Although it no longer sells its products in the United States due to poor sales, in 2010 the company pledged to donate $130,000 to the college's scholarship fund.[49]

In 2013 Franklin & Marshall became a sponsor of Hellas Verona, a football (soccer) team in the Italian Serie A.[50]

References

  1. ^ As of June 30, 2020. U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2020 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY19 to FY20 (Report). National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA. February 19, 2021. Retrieved February 20, 2021.
  2. ^ "Franklin & Marshall – F&M's New President". www.fandm.edu.
  3. ^ a b "F&M Fast Facts". Franklin & Marshall College. Retrieved April 14, 2021.
  4. ^ "Franklin and Marshall College". nces.ed.gov. U.S. Dept of Education. Retrieved February 4, 2023.
  5. ^ a b U.S. News & World Report. "Franklin & Marshall College - Profile, Rankings, and Data | US News Best Colleges".
  6. ^ "Franklin and Marshall College". Forbes. Retrieved August 20, 2022.
  7. ^ "2021 Liberal Arts Colleges Ranking". Washington Monthly. Retrieved August 20, 2022.
  8. ^ a b "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. July 9, 2010.
  9. ^ "Best Colleges 2021: National Liberal Arts Colleges". U.S. News & World Report. Retrieved September 24, 2020.
  10. ^ "2021 Liberal Arts Rankings". Washington Monthly. Retrieved September 9, 2021.
  11. ^ "Forbes America's Top Colleges List 2022". Forbes. Retrieved September 13, 2022.
  12. ^ "Wall Street Journal/Times Higher Education College Rankings 2022". The Wall Street Journal/Times Higher Education. Retrieved July 26, 2022.
  13. ^ . Archived from the original on June 10, 2010. Retrieved March 17, 2010.
  14. ^ . Library.fandm.edu. Archived from the original (JPG) on March 1, 2012. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  15. ^ . Fandm.edu. Archived from the original on July 30, 2010. Retrieved 2011-03-12.
  16. ^ a b c Dubbs, Joseph (1903). History of Franklin and Marshall College: Franklin College, 1787-1853; Marshall College, 1836-1853; Franklin and Marshall College, 1853-1903. Franklin and Marshall College Alumni Association.
  17. ^ Franklin & Marshall College. "History". Retrieved May 10, 2020.
  18. ^ . Library.fandm.edu. Archived from the original on June 11, 2010. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  19. ^ Harry Martin John Klein (1921). Lancaster's Golden Century, 1821-1921: A Chronicle of Men and Women who Planned and Toiled to Build a City Strong and Beautiful. Hager and Brother. p. 71. Thank God! The College stands higher than the jail. Education should be lifted up and let crime sink to the lowest depths!.
  20. ^ (PDF). Lancaster, Pennsylvania: Franklin and Marshall College. 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 9, 2010. Retrieved September 29, 2011.
  21. ^ Buckwalter, Jim (January 21, 2019). "Quotes from the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s 1963 speech in Lancaster". LNP. Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Retrieved October 3, 2020.
  22. ^ . July 18, 2013. Archived from the original on July 18, 2013.
  23. ^ (PDF). Fandm.edu. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 26, 2014. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  24. ^ [1] March 15, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ Rupp, Lindsey (April 13, 2010). "John Burness to head Franklin & Marshall College". Duke Chronicle. from the original on May 8, 2010. Retrieved November 2, 2018.
  26. ^ F&M Names New President – Pennsylvania News Story – WGAL The Susquehanna Valley March 8, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. Wgal.com (2010-11-16). Retrieved on 2010-12-10.
  27. ^ Forde, Dana (March 12, 2014). "Peers Providing Support to Vulnerable First-generation Students - Higher Education". Diverseeducation.com. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  28. ^ "College Career Centers Stretch to Take On New Roles - The Chronicle of Higher Education". Chronicle.com. September 30, 2013. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  29. ^ "Franklin & Marshall – New Faculty Center Awarded Mellon Grant". Fandm.edu. March 28, 2014. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  30. ^ "55 Colleges Face Sexual Assault Investigations". Huffingtonpost.com. July 1, 2014. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  31. ^ . Archived from the original on October 18, 2014. Retrieved October 13, 2014.
  32. ^ DeLassus, David. . College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on October 21, 2012. Retrieved April 18, 2011.
  33. ^ Brandon Croce (July 18, 2011). "100 Best Coaches in College Basketball History". Bleacher Report. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  34. ^ . Archived from the original on February 26, 2009. Retrieved September 26, 2009.
  35. ^ . Archived from the original on October 7, 2010. Retrieved September 26, 2009.
  36. ^ "Centennial Conference Individual Men's Swimming Champions 1994–2008" (PDF). Retrieved September 26, 2009.[dead link]
  37. ^ . Collegiatewaterpolo.org. Archived from the original on October 19, 2014. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  38. ^ www.cstv.com. Archived from the original on October 16, 2005.
  39. ^ "Franklin & Marshall – Shadek Stadium". www.fandm.edu.
  40. ^ — Jack Stripling (March 8, 2011). "Stripling, Jack. "Return of the Greeks." "Inside Higher Ed", Dec 22, 2009". Insidehighered.com. Retrieved March 12, 2011.
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on August 10, 2014. Retrieved August 10, 2014.
  42. ^ a b c Anson, Jack L.; Marchenasi, Robert F., eds. (1991) [1879]. Baird's Manual of American College Fraternities (20th ed.). Indianapolis, IN: Baird's Manual Foundation, Inc. pp. III-31. ISBN 978-0963715906.. Baird's Manual is also available online here: The Baird's Manual Online Archive homepage.
  43. ^ Pilgram, Robert J. (1930). General register of the members of Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity, 1850–1930. Philadelphia, Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity. p. 190. OCLC 10486816.
  44. ^ Rand, Frank Prentice; Ralph Watts; James E. Sefton (1993), All The Phi Sigs - A History, Grand Chapter of Phi Sigma Kappa
  45. ^ a b (Press release). Franklin & Marshall College. June 25, 2003. Archived from the original on December 2, 2008. Retrieved December 28, 2011.{{cite press release}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  46. ^ "COUNTRY BEAT: Tim McGraw, Jeff Carson, Tracy Byrd ..." MTV. October 9, 2001. Retrieved February 23, 2016.
  47. ^ a b Roggie, Alyssa (Autumn 2001). . Franklin & Marshall magazine. Archived from the original on March 24, 2012. Retrieved December 28, 2011.
  48. ^ Luzer, Daniel (April 2, 2010). . Washington Monthly. Archived from the original on April 6, 2010. Retrieved December 5, 2014.
  49. ^ Elbaum, Rachel. . Today (NBC News). Archived from the original on January 7, 2012. Retrieved December 28, 2011.
  50. ^ "Franklin & Marshall Becomes Main Sponsor of Hellas Verona". Isportconnect.com. November 29, 2013. Retrieved February 23, 2016.

Coordinates: 40°2′49″N 76°19′14″W / 40.04694°N 76.32056°W / 40.04694; -76.32056

External links

  • Official website
  • Official athletics website
  • Illinois Digital Newspaper Collections: F&M College Reporter (1964-1987)

franklin, marshall, college, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, art. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Franklin amp Marshall College news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article May 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Franklin amp Marshall College F amp M is a private liberal arts college in Lancaster Pennsylvania It employs 175 full time faculty members and has a student body of approximately 2 400 full time students It was founded upon the merger of Franklin College and Marshall College in 1853 Franklin amp Marshall CollegeFormer namesFranklin College 1787 1853 Marshall College 1836 1853 MottoLux et Lex Latin Motto in EnglishLight and LawTypePrivate liberal arts collegeEstablishedJune 6 1787 235 years ago 1787 06 06 predecessor June 7 1853 169 years ago 1853 06 07 combined colleges Academic affiliationsSpace grantEndowment 350 4 million 2020 1 PresidentBarbara K Altmann 2 Academic staff207Undergraduates2 283 3 LocationLancaster Pennsylvania United StatesCampusUrban 220 acres 89 ha 3 NicknameDiplomatsWebsitewww wbr fandm wbr eduThe college offers various majors and minors across 62 fields of study including the humanities social sciences natural sciences and other disciplines The college also operates an advanced studies program in Bath England Its most popular majors are 4 Multi Interdisciplinary Studies 100 Business Administration amp Management 57 Economics 41 Biology Biological Sciences 39 Political Science amp Government 36 Behavioral Sciences 32 dd All students are undergraduates and nearly all live on campus The college is a top producer of Fulbright Fellows Contents 1 Statistics 1 1 Rankings and reputation 1 2 Admissions 2 History 2 1 Franklin College 18th century 2 2 Marshall College 19th century 2 3 Merger 2 4 Late 19th century 2 5 20th century 2 6 21st century 2 7 Presidents 3 Athletics 3 1 Club sports 3 2 Sponaugle Williamson Field 3 3 Shadek Stadium 4 Greek system 4 1 List of fraternities 4 2 List of sororities 5 Notable alumni 6 Clothing company 7 References 8 External linksStatistics EditRankings and reputation Edit In the U S News amp World Report annual college rankings for 2022 Franklin and Marshall College tied for 42nd in National Liberal Arts Colleges 44th in Best Undergraduate Teaching 98th in Top Performers on Social Mobility and 31st in Best Value Schools 5 In the similar Forbes rankings Franklin and Marshall ranked 134th in overall top colleges 74th in private colleges 29th in Liberal Arts Universities and 54th in the Northeast 6 Washington Monthly ranked Franklin and Marshall 35th in their list of Liberal Arts Colleges 7 Admissions EditFranklin and Marshall s admissions process is rated as more selective by U S News amp World Report For the class of 2025 F amp M received 7 720 applications and had an acceptance rate of 38 5 Franklin and Marshall College Campus Historic DistrictU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S Historic district Shadek Fackenthal Library 1934 35 the youngest building in the district Show map of Pennsylvania Show map of the United StatesLocationCollege Avenue Lancaster PennsylvaniaArea23 acres 9 3 ha ArchitectDixon Balbirnie amp Dixon et al Architectural styleGothic Revival Tudor RevivalNRHP reference No 03001190 8 Added to NRHPNovember 21 2003Academic rankingsLiberal arts collegesU S News amp World Report 9 39Washington Monthly 10 35NationalForbes 11 138THE WSJ 12 84History EditFranklin College 18th century Edit Franklin College was chartered on June 6 1787 in Lancaster Pennsylvania on the site of a former brewery 13 It was named for Benjamin Franklin who donated 200 to the new institution 14 Founded by four prominent ministers from the German Reformed Church and the Lutheran Church in conjunction with numerous Philadelphians the school was established as a German college whose goal was to preserve our present republican system of government and to promote those improvements in the arts and sciences which alone render nations respectable great and happy Its first trustees included five signers of the Declaration of Independence two members of the Constitutional Convention and seven officers of the Revolutionary War 15 The school s first classes were taught on July 16 1787 with instruction taking place in both English and German making it the first bilingual college in the United States 16 citation needed The first class consisted of 78 men and 36 women Franklin was the first college in the United States to accept female students However the coed policy was soon abandoned Coeducation was not revived at the College for another 182 years 17 In July 1789 Franklin College went into debt because its annual tuition of four pounds was not enough to cover operating costs Enrollment dwindled to just a few students and eventually the college existed as nothing more than an annual meeting of the board of trustees In an effort to help the ailing school an academy was established in 1807 For the next three decades Franklin College and Franklin Academy managed to limp along financially with instructors supplementing their income with private tutoring 16 citation needed Marshall College 19th century Edit Having grown from a Reformed Church academy Marshall College opened in 1836 in Mercersburg Pennsylvania 18 The school was named for the fourth Chief Justice of the United States John Marshall who had died the previous year It was founded with the belief that harmony between knowledge and will was necessary to create a well rounded person During its first year 18 students were taught by Frederick Augustus Rauch and his assistant Samuel A Budd Rauch an acclaimed young scholar and theologian from Germany who authored the first American textbook in psychology also served as the college s president citation needed The school s small faculty grew in both size and status with the addition of John Williamson Nevin and another German scholar church historian Philip Schaff Nevin became the college s president upon Rauch s sudden death in 1841 citation needed Life at Marshall College was regimented Students were required to attend morning prayers sometimes as early as 5 a m and were expected to study in their rooms for six hours a day In addition they were forbidden to associate with people of questionable moral character citation needed Marshall College quickly gained national recognition and attracted students from a large geographical area with some coming as far away as the West Indies However despite being initially well funded Marshall College began to experience financial difficulties of its own By the late 1840s financial support and enthusiasm among the local community had virtually disappeared and the school was in danger of closing its doors permanently citation needed In 1835 the school s Debating Society was renamed Diagnothian Literary Society at the suggestion of seminary student Samuel Reed Fisher That June Diagnothian was divided into two friendly rivals to encourage debate Diagnothian retained its original name while the new society was named Goethean in honor of German philosopher and poet Johann Wolfgang von Goethe The two organizations sponsored orations and debated politics philosophy and literature They merged in 1955 but became separate entities again in 1989 The Diagnothian Society is the oldest student organization on campus citation needed Merger Edit On December 6 1849 Franklin College and Marshall College began to consider merging as a way to secure the future of both institutions Three years later on June 7 1853 the combined college was formally dedicated at Lancaster s Fulton Hall The merger created an all male Reformed Church institution that combined the resources of both schools James Buchanan four years prior to becoming the 15th President of the United States was named president of the first Franklin amp Marshall board of trustees The college s first two presidents Emanuel Vogel Gerhart a Marshall College graduate and Nevin struggled to keep the young school afloat with an inadequate endowment The hope of creating a reputable liberal arts institution fueled their efforts to push on No second or third rate school will do said Nevin at the formal dedication of the united college We must either have no college at all or else have one that may be in all respects worthy of the name citation needed The citizens of Lancaster agreed to donate 25 000 towards the construction of a building for the merged college A site on the east end of the city was proposed near where the new Lancaster County Prison was constructed in 1851 Two parallel streets in the area were renamed one for Franklin and one for Marshall 16 However Buchanan ultimately rejected the proposal saying I do not think the best location for a literary institution should be between a court house and a jail Instead Buchanan and the board selected a site at the northwestern end of Lancaster Known locally as Gallows Hill it was the former site of Lancaster s public executions and the highest point of ground in city At the laying of the building s cornerstone in 1853 Henry Harbaugh a Marshall College graduate and pastor of the Reformed Church of Lancaster noted that the city s lowest point was the prison Harbaugh stated Thank God The College stands higher than the jail Education should be lifted up and let crime sink to the lowest depths The distinctive tall towered structure designed in the Gothic Revival style was dedicated on May 16 1856 as Recitation Hall Recitation Hall came to be known as Old Main and the ground as College Hill 19 Franklin and Marshall College took as its motto the Latin phrase Lux et Lex which translates in English to Light and Law This reversed the Marshall College motto Lex et Lux While legend has it that the switch was the result of an error by an engraver it has since been suggested that the words deliberately reflect its namesakes Benjamin Franklin light and John Marshall law The college seal depicts profiles of Franklin and Marshall looking to the left It has been suggested that this represents the two leaders looking westward to the future expansion of the United States Despite his nominal secondary priority John Marshall is on the left of the seal and Benjamin Franklin is on the right But Franklin s entire head is shown while Marshall s profile is cut off and far in the background Speculation has suggested that this demonstrates an unspoken tendency to favor Franklin s legacy over Marshall s This preference became explicit when the school celebrated Benjamin Franklin s 300th birthday but ignored John Marshall s 250th birthday during consecutive semesters of the 2005 2006 academic year The school recognized Marshall s milestone birthday only after a petition was signed by a significant portion of students and faculty citation needed Old Main Goethean Hall and Diagnothian Hall were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975 8 Late 19th century Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Franklin amp Marshall College news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1872 the Franklin and Marshall Academy an all male prep school opened on campus When it closed in 1943 it was the last prep school in America to be directly affiliated with a private college or university The academy s first building East Hall was constructed in 1872 A second and larger building Hartman Hall replaced it in 1907 Both buildings were used by the college after the academy folded Hartman Hall was demolished in 1975 followed by East Hall in 1978 College Days the first student newspaper began publication in 1873 Later student newspapers included The College Student 1881 1914 The F amp M Weekly 1891 1915 The Student Weekly 1915 1964 The Blue and The White 1990 1992 and The College Reporter 1964 present Oriflamme the Franklin and Marshall College yearbook was established in 1883 In 1887 the centennial celebration of Franklin College was held By then over 100 students were enrolled at F amp M 1899 saw the formation of the college s first theatre group the Franklin amp Marshall Dramatic Association The next year it was renamed the Green Room Club The club performed plays at Lancaster s Fulton Opera House Because the college admitted only men the female roles were played by local actresses In 1937 the Green Room Theatre opened on campus F amp M alumni who have performed on the Green Room stage include Oscar winning film director Franklin J Schaffner and actors Roy Scheider and Treat Williams 20th century Edit Old Main Franklin amp Marshall College c 1910 The college grew rapidly after World War I Enrollment rose from around 300 students in 1920 to over 750 by 1930 In 1924 the architectural firm of Klauder and Day presented a master campus plan in the Colonial Revival style Dietz Santee dormitory Meyran Franklin dormitory the Mayser Physical Education Center and Hensel Hall were all completed within three years Two additional dormitories were planned but never constructed The sesquicentennial celebration of Franklin College was held in October 1937 Student enrollment by then was 800 A commemorative plaque celebrating the sesquicentennial and the signing of the United States Constitution was presented to the college by the Lancaster County Historical Society In 1939 the school began an aviation program in the new Keiper Liberal Arts Building The Aeronautical Laboratory eventually became a government sponsored flight school with 40 faculty members Two airplanes were disassembled moved into the building and reassembled on the third floor as flight simulators During World War II Franklin and Marshall College was one of 131 colleges and universities that adopted the V 12 Navy College Training Program offering students a path to a Navy commission 20 By 1945 with most young men in the armed services the college population dwindled to just under 500 students and 28 faculty members The end of the war brought an influx of students pursuing degrees under the G I Bill By 1946 enrollment had swelled to over 1 200 students including four women in the pre med program causing a sudden critical shortage of faculty The 1950s and 1960s brought more college expansion and construction including North Museum 1953 Marshall Buchanan Residence Hall 1956 Appel Infirmary 1959 Schnader Residence Hall 1959 Mayser Physical Education Center 1962 Benjamin Franklin Residence Halls 1964 Pfeiffer Science Complex now Hackman Physical Science Laboratory 1967 Grundy Observatory 1967 Whitely Psychology Laboratory 1968 and Thomas Residence Hall 1968 Like other academic institutions in the 1960s Franklin and Marshall endured student protests during the Civil Rights Movement and the Vietnam War In April 1961 students rioted in front of the President s house and Hensel Hall burning effigies and college property in protest of administration policies citation needed Martin Luther King Jr visited the campus on December 12 1963 three weeks after the assassination of John F Kennedy and spoke on civil rights to an overflow crowd of more than 4 000 in Mayser Center the school s gymnasium 21 In 1965 Robert Mezey a 30 year old visiting English instructor and poet spoke on campus against the Vietnam War and traveled to Washington DC to march against the conflict When he was accused of urging students to burn their draft cards he was suspended with pay for a month while the college investigated The incident generated controversy in the local press with some residents ordering him to get the hell out of Lancaster and go to Russia Though Mezey was reinstated he left the college the following spring This became known as the Mezey Affair 22 In the spring of 1969 black students protested the final examination of the history course The Black Experience in America Demanding an apology from the faculty for exploitation and an A in the course the students argued that no white man can test them on their blackness The day before the exam the professors agreed to the apology but insisted that the students take the final exam On May 22 the day of the exam 40 black students many of whom were not enrolled in the course blocked the entrance to the exam room in Old Main The professors attempted to hand out the exam but the protesters confiscated them Retreating to Goethean Hall next door the professors and staff met to evaluate the situation The protesters followed them to the building blocked all doors and exits and held them hostage declaring that they would not release the faculty members until they received an apology and immunity from punishment The standoff lasted until midnight when the professors agreed to allow the students to grade themselves The students relented and released the hostages The college s Professional Standards Committee later overturned the decision declaring that the professors must grade their students citation needed In 1969 Franklin and Marshall College ended its formal affiliation with the United Church of Christ becoming a secular school Franklin College had enrolled female students during its first few years in the eighteenth century to its academy for teenagers Franklin and Marshall College was an all male institution Women were permitted to attend summer school classes at F amp M beginning in 1942 Continuing a trend at gender exclusive schools across the country the Board of Trustees announced on January 17 1969 that it had voted to admit women to F amp M a decision that was supported by male students In the fall of 1969 82 freshman women and 34 female transfer students were enrolled in F amp M s first coeducational class In 1970 F amp M students protested the administration s failure to rehire popular sociology instructor Anthony Lazroe and history instructor Henry Mayer The protest known as the Lazroe Mayer incident culminated in an East Hall sit in on April 30 where students took over the building for several hours On September 17 1970 the Herman Art Center named after Jacob Leon Herman Class of 1916 was dedicated as part of Convocation during which painter Jim Dine and sculptor Chaim Gross were awarded honorary degrees The building was designed by Fisher Nes and Campbell of Baltimore MD for the studio art program but only half of the original design was constructed due to lack of funds In 1976 the Steinman College Center was constructed The building designed by Minoru Yamasaki architect of New York s World Trade Center originally housed the campus bookstore Today it houses the College Reporter the Oriflamme Yearbook the College Entertainment Committee the Phillips Museum of Art Pandini s a restaurant the campus radio station WFNM and a post office On April 29 1976 the Green Room Theatre staged the world premiere of the John Updike play Buchanan Dying about former President James Buchanan a Lancaster resident and former president of the board of trustees The production was directed by Edward S Brubaker and starred Peter Vogt an F amp M alumnus After the premiere a reception was held at Wheatland Buchanan s Lancaster residence On March 28 1979 the Three Mile Island nuclear reactor in nearby Harrisburg Pennsylvania experienced a partial meltdown forcing the college to close briefly The college prospered during the 1980s Construction projects initiated during the decade included Hartman Green 1982 French House 1984 Murray Arts House 1984 Ice Rink 1984 Spaulding Plaza 1985 and the Other Room Theatre 1985 Major renovations and expansions included Fackenthal Library 1983 renamed Shadek Fackenthal Library currently over 510 000 volumes Stahr Hall 1985 renamed Stager Hall 1988 the Black Cultural Center 1986 and Weis Residence Hall 1989 On June 6 1987 Franklin and Marshall College celebrated its bicentennial The 1990s brought a major expansion to the north side of campus with the construction of College Square in 1991 The multi use complex houses a bookstore laundromat video store restaurants and a food court Other buildings from the decade include International House 1990 Martin Library of the Sciences 1990 currently over 61 000 volumes and the Alumni Sports and Fitness Center 1995 21st century Edit At the start of the 21st century the college continued to grow with the addition of the Barshinger Center for Musical Arts in Hensel Hall 2000 President s House built 1933 purchased by the college in 2002 Roschel Performing Arts Center 2003 Writer s House 2004 College Row Apartments 2007 which included apartment style living for upper classmen with retail space on ground floors the renovated Klehr Center for Jewish life 2008 and the Ann amp Richard Barshinger Life Sciences amp Philosophy Building 2007 In 2003 the National Park Service established the Franklin and Marshall College Campus Historic District listing 14 buildings including Old Main Goethean Hall and Diagnothian Hall previously listed in 1975 and three architectural features 23 On January 19 2006 the college celebrated the tricentennial of Benjamin Franklin s birth Franklin scholar Walter Isaacson gave a lecture and a full page ad praising Franklin and promoting the college was purchased in The New York Times On March 10 2010 it was announced that then current president John Fry would be leaving the college to become the president of Drexel University on August 1 2010 The college immediately began a search for a new president for the fall semester 24 Alumnus John Burness took a one year leave from his job at Duke University as senior vice president for public affairs and government relations to head the college as interim president 25 On November 16 2010 Daniel R Porterfield was announced as the new president effective March 1 2011 Porterfield came to F amp M from Georgetown University in Washington D C where he served as a senior vice president He became the 15th president in the college s history 26 Since 2011 hundreds of talented underserved high school students from across the country have taken part in F amp M College Prep a summer immersion program that offers an introduction to college life Each of these participants have gone on to college and more than 90 have gone on to enroll at four year colleges including Harvard Brown Stanford Georgetown and Bucknell universities the University of Texas Austin Pomona College Trinity College Spelman College and Franklin amp Marshall 27 The Office of Student and Post Graduate Development offering life skills workshops job search boot camps for seniors and recent grads on campus recruiting and alumni programming opened in 2012 and enjoys wide support from students and alumni 28 The Andrew W Mellon Foundation awarded F amp M a 700 000 grant for its Faculty Center which was launched in 2013 to improve support for faculty in their roles as researchers and educators 29 On May 1 2014 Franklin amp Marshall College was named as one of 55 colleges under review or investigation by the U S Department of Education s Office for Civil Rights for their policies or practices for handling sexual assault reports 30 Prior to the public announcement President Porterfield sent an email to address the impending OCR fact finding investigation 31 Presidents Edit Franklin College Gotthilf Heinrich Ernst Muhlenberg 1787 1815 Operated as an academy by Board of Trustees 1816 1853 Marshall College Frederick Augustus Rauch 1836 1841 The Rev John Williamson Nevin 1841 1853 Franklin and Marshall College The Rev Emanuel Vogel Gerhart 38 1854 1866 John Williamson Nevin 1866 1876 The Rev Thomas Gilmore Apple 50 1877 1889 The Rev John Summers Stahr 67 1889 1909 Henry Harbaugh Apple 89 1910 1935 John Ahlum Schaeffer 04 1935 1941 H M J Klein 93 1941 acting president Theodore August Distler 1941 1954 William Webster Hall 1955 1957 Frederick deWolf Bolman Jr 1957 1962 Anthony R Appel 35 1962 resigned after one week G Wayne Glick 1962 acting president Keith Spalding 1963 1983 James Lawrence Powell 1983 1988 A Richard Kneedler 65 1988 2002 John Anderson Fry 2002 2010 John Burness 67 2010 2011 interim president Daniel R Porterfield 2011 2018 Barbara K Altmann 2018 Athletics EditSports have been an active part of Franklin and Marshall since its inception The college s sports teams are called the Diplomats Many of the teams compete in the Centennial Conference Men s intercollegiate competition is in fourteen sports baseball basketball cross country football golf lacrosse soccer squash swimming tennis indoor track and field outdoor track and field wrestling and rowing Women s intercollegiate competition is in fourteen sports basketball rowing cross country field hockey golf lacrosse soccer softball squash swimming tennis indoor track and field outdoor track and field and volleyball F amp M competes in NCAA Division III for all varsity sports except wrestling which is Division I and men s and women s squash which are nondivisional citation needed The Franklin amp Marshall Diplomats football program was first was organized in 1887 by Seminary student Miles O Noll Franklin and Marshall was defeated 9 0 by the York YMCA Later that year the program played a re match and lost again this time by score of 6 4 32 Frank Mount Pleasant became the head football coach in 1910 Professor Charles W Mayser founded the F amp M wrestling team in 1923 and early 1924 saw the college s first wrestling match as the Blue amp White defeated Western Maryland College 24 5 The Diplomat grapplers finished their maiden season with a 4 1 record F amp M wrestling competes in the EIWA and is when the only Division III school to compete in Division I wrestling citation needed In 1992 F amp M became a charter member of the Centennial Conference an athletic conference of 11 mid Atlantic institutions that compete in 22 sports in the NCAA s Division III The other founding members of the conference are Bryn Mawr College Dickinson College Gettysburg College Haverford College Johns Hopkins University Muhlenberg College Swarthmore College Ursinus College Western Maryland College renamed McDaniel College and Washington College citation needed The men s basketball team has reached the NCAA Division III Final Four on five occasions 1979 1991 1996 2000 2009 appearing in the national championship game in 1991 The men s basketball team has been nationally ranked on a frequent basis since the late 1970s including No 1 in Division III at some point during seven different seasons Head coach Glenn Robinson is the career leader in wins in Division III Robinson has been listed as one of the top 100 college basketball coaches of all time 33 Other successful athletic teams at F amp M include men s soccer men s and women s swimming baseball and squash They all traditionally compete for conference championships and have been ranked high nationally In 2008 the men s swimming team won the Centennial Conference championships and the women s swimming team placed second 34 35 At that championship Thomas Anthony Grabiak Jr of F amp M set Centennial Conference championship meet records in the 100 and 200 yd breaststroke events 36 Men s squash consistently maintains a top 20 Division I national ranking In 1987 the men s squash team finished 15 1 and achieved a 2 national ranking led by four time all American Morris Clothier In 1988 the men s lacrosse team finished the season 13 3 and played in the USILA national semifinals citation needed Club sports Edit F amp M also boasts several student run clubs most notably men s and women s rugby both of which have become serious contenders for regional and national championships each season and which compete in the Eastern Pennsylvania Rugby Union Ultimate frisbee is also a popular club sport on campus fielding both a men s and a women s team In 2009 the college water polo team was revived and currently competes in the American Water Polo League and the Collegiate Water Polo League 37 Sponaugle Williamson Field Edit Sponaugle Williamson Field LocationHarrisburg PikeLancaster PA 17604 3003OwnerFranklin amp Marshall CollegeOperatorFranklin amp Marshall CollegeCapacity4 000SurfaceKentucky bluegrassConstructionBroke ground1920Opened1920TenantsF amp M Diplomats NCAA Sponaugle Williamson Field is a stadium for the outdoor athletic teams of the college It was built in 1920 as Williamson Field named after S Woodrow Sponaugle who coached football and basketball and was the athletic director at F amp M for 15 years He shares the stadium s dedication with Henry S Williamson who was a trustee of the college from 1894 to 1917 38 Shadek Stadium Edit Shadek Stadium is used for football and lacrosse Construction began in the fall of 2016 and ended in the fall of 2017 The stadium was named after the Shadek family a family prominent at the school The turf field in the stadium Gilburg Field is named after football player and former F amp M coach Tom Gilburg In the first football game played in the stadium the Diplomats defeated Centennial Conference rivals Dickinson College 56 0 39 Greek system EditChi Phi founded on December 1 1854 remains the only fraternity at F amp M with a fraternity house actually on the campus grounds In 1929 through a special lease agreement with the college the chapter built its house at 603 Race Avenue The house was dedicated and opened in 1929 during the chapter s 75th anniversary celebration During World War II with school and fraternity attendance down the house was converted to a temporary infirmary In 1998 due to a series of disagreements with the college the lease was terminated and the fraternity was evicted On February 7 2001 after three years Chi Phi renegotiated a new lease with F amp M They reoccupied the house the following August In 1978 the school s first sorority Sigma Sigma Sigma was chartered In 2005 the chapter became inactive In April 1988 the college s board of trustees voted to no longer officially recognize the school s fraternities and sororities This was known as derecognition At the time three of the school s fraternities had recently lost their national charters due to various offenses In an effort to repair the system the college administration proposed eight specific reforms to the Greek Council which were ultimately rejected by all of the organizations The result was derecognition This was highly unpopular with the student body but it served to remove the college from any liability associated with hazing and underage alcohol abuse issues that were in the national public eye at that time The Greek system continued albeit without financial or administrative support from the college After several years a small number of fraternities struggled with health code violations fires and one accidental alcohol related death Owing to several factors including dwindling financial support from fraternity and sorority alumni and legitimate concerns about student academics health and safety the college announced on May 19 2004 that it would reinstate a new revised Greek system beginning on September 1 2004 after a 16 year absence 40 As part of the new agreement between the school s Greek organizations and the administration fraternity and sorority houses are required to submit to weekly life safety inspections by school officials and inspections by the local fire department police department and office of public health conducted once per semester An Inter Fraternity Council consisting of representatives from all fraternities and advised by a member of the faculty as well as a Greek Council consisting of members of all Greek organizations male and female similarly advised by a faculty member were re established to deal with issues facing the Greek community and advising the administration on Greek issues As recently as the fall of 2008 relations between the administration and the Greek system were strained The administration placed a month long moratorium on all Greek social events During this period the Interfraternity Council revised protocols governing parties and the revisions were approved by the administration resulting in the lifting of the moratorium but the administration committed to more sternly enforcing the newly agreed upon rules There were also tensions between some members of the Greek system and Lancaster City arising chiefly from incidents of crime Concerns over the condition of Greek housing has led the administration and Greek organizations to examine different possibilities for improving the quality of housing options in order for such houses to receive continued support and approval from the college In some cases the result has been the temporary closure of Greek housing until the buildings can be brought up to school and town safety standards Greek life is a major part of F amp M s community As of the spring of 2014 43 7 of the F amp M student body are members of the Greek Community 41 List of fraternities Edit XF Chi Phi Zeta Chapter fall of 1854 currently inactive 42 FKS Phi Kappa Sigma Zeta Chapter October 13 1854 43 FKPS Phi Kappa Psi Penn Eta Chapter 1860DTD Delta Tau Delta Tau Prime Chapter 1874 1895 currently inactive 42 FSK Phi Sigma Kappa Pi Chapter 1903 1983 currently inactive 44 DSF Delta Sigma Phi Upsilon Chapter 1915 2015 currently inactive LXA Lambda Chi Alpha Alpha Theta Chapter 1917 1980 currently inactive SP Sigma Pi Nu Chapter 1918 2017 currently inactive FKT Phi Kappa Tau Xi Chapter 1921 currently inactive KS Kappa Sigma Delta Rho Chapter 1929 2021 currently inactive ZBT Zeta Beta Tau Alpha Tau Chapter 1931 1988 existed as Alpha Sigma Phi Alpha Tau Chapter 1996 1998 ZBT 2016 presentPLF Pi Lambda Phi Tau Chapter 1947 currently inactive FSP Phi Sigma Pi Zeta Beta Chapter 2010List of sororities Edit AF Alpha Phi Zeta Sigma Chapter 1982 19xx 2008 ADP Alpha Delta Pi Theta Lambda Chapter 2011 A3D Alpha Xi Delta Iota Psi Chapter 2014 XW Chi Omega Phi Lambda Chapter 1987 KD Kappa Delta Eta Lambda Chapter 2008KBG Kappa Beta Gamma Nu Chapter 2002 2008 currently inactive SSS Sigma Sigma Sigma Delta Nu Chapter 1978 2005 currently inactive 42 DS8 Delta Sigma Theta Lambda Gamma 2017 SLG Sigma Lambda Gamma National Sorority Inc 2019Notable alumni EditMain article List of Franklin amp Marshall College alumniClothing company EditSee also Franklin amp Marshall company In 1999 a company based in Verona Italy began producing items of clothing in a vintage 1950s collegiate style with the words Franklin and Marshall on them F amp M alumni began to report seeing F amp M merchandise for sale in Europe which puzzled the college 45 In 2001 Tim McGraw posed for publicity photos wearing a Franklin Marshall Wrestling T shirt 46 one of which was included in the CD booklet for his album Set This Circus Down When many asked Franklin amp Marshall College about its nonexistent connection to the singer the college investigated and discovered that the Franklin Marshall Clothing company was using its name without permission 47 In 2003 the college licensed the name to the company so it could sell its products many of which omit Franklin amp Marshall s ampersand in the United States 45 47 The clothing company has stated in news reports that its designs are inspired by the American Vintage College spirit as exemplified by Franklin amp Marshall College 48 Most of its products are made in Italy and are much more expensive than the Champion produced licensed apparel sold by the college s bookstore As of 2011 update the company has stores in six cities Athens Dubai Milan Tokyo and Paris and also sells through high end stores like Harrods in Britain Although it no longer sells its products in the United States due to poor sales in 2010 the company pledged to donate 130 000 to the college s scholarship fund 49 In 2013 Franklin amp Marshall became a sponsor of Hellas Verona a football soccer team in the Italian Serie A 50 References Edit As of June 30 2020 U S and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2020 Endowment Market Value and Change in Endowment Market Value from FY19 to FY20 Report National Association of College and University Business Officers and TIAA February 19 2021 Retrieved February 20 2021 Franklin amp Marshall F amp M s New President www fandm edu a b F amp M Fast Facts Franklin amp Marshall College Retrieved April 14 2021 Franklin and Marshall College nces ed gov U S Dept of Education Retrieved February 4 2023 a b U S News amp World Report Franklin amp Marshall College Profile Rankings and Data US News Best Colleges Franklin and Marshall College Forbes Retrieved August 20 2022 2021 Liberal Arts Colleges Ranking Washington Monthly Retrieved August 20 2022 a b National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service July 9 2010 Best Colleges 2021 National Liberal Arts Colleges U S News amp World Report Retrieved September 24 2020 2021 Liberal Arts Rankings Washington Monthly Retrieved September 9 2021 Forbes America s Top Colleges List 2022 Forbes Retrieved September 13 2022 Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education College Rankings 2022 The Wall Street Journal Times Higher Education Retrieved July 26 2022 Franklin and Marshall College Founding Documents Online Archived from the original on June 10 2010 Retrieved March 17 2010 Letter of introduction image Library fandm edu Archived from the original JPG on March 1 2012 Retrieved February 23 2016 1st paragraph of History section Fandm edu Archived from the original on July 30 2010 Retrieved 2011 03 12 a b c Dubbs Joseph 1903 History of Franklin and Marshall College Franklin College 1787 1853 Marshall College 1836 1853 Franklin and Marshall College 1853 1903 Franklin and Marshall College Alumni Association Franklin amp Marshall College History Retrieved May 10 2020 Papers of founding for Marshall College See pages 6 as given by link and 7 Library fandm edu Archived from the original on June 11 2010 Retrieved February 23 2016 Harry Martin John Klein 1921 Lancaster s Golden Century 1821 1921 A Chronicle of Men and Women who Planned and Toiled to Build a City Strong and Beautiful Hager and Brother p 71 Thank God The College stands higher than the jail Education should be lifted up and let crime sink to the lowest depths Oral Histories Collection PDF Lancaster Pennsylvania Franklin and Marshall College 2011 Archived from the original PDF on June 9 2010 Retrieved September 29 2011 Buckwalter Jim January 21 2019 Quotes from the Rev Martin Luther King Jr s 1963 speech in Lancaster LNP Lancaster Pennsylvania Retrieved October 3 2020 Poet who spoke at F amp M against Vietnam War recalls the time Columns July 18 2013 Archived from the original on July 18 2013 Franklin amp Marshall College Campus Historic District original nomination form PDF Fandm edu Archived from the original PDF on February 26 2014 Retrieved February 23 2016 1 Archived March 15 2010 at the Wayback Machine Rupp Lindsey April 13 2010 John Burness to head Franklin amp Marshall College Duke Chronicle Archived from the original on May 8 2010 Retrieved November 2 2018 F amp M Names New President Pennsylvania News Story WGAL The Susquehanna Valley Archived March 8 2012 at the Wayback Machine Wgal com 2010 11 16 Retrieved on 2010 12 10 Forde Dana March 12 2014 Peers Providing Support to Vulnerable First generation Students Higher Education Diverseeducation com Retrieved February 23 2016 College Career Centers Stretch to Take On New Roles The Chronicle of Higher Education Chronicle com September 30 2013 Retrieved February 23 2016 Franklin amp Marshall New Faculty Center Awarded Mellon Grant Fandm edu March 28 2014 Retrieved February 23 2016 55 Colleges Face Sexual Assault Investigations Huffingtonpost com July 1 2014 Retrieved February 23 2016 2013 14 Messages from the President Archived from the original on October 18 2014 Retrieved October 13 2014 DeLassus David Coaching Records Game by Game M O Noll College Football Data Warehouse Archived from the original on October 21 2012 Retrieved April 18 2011 Brandon Croce July 18 2011 100 Best Coaches in College Basketball History Bleacher Report Retrieved February 23 2016 2009 Men s Swimming Championship Archived from the original on February 26 2009 Retrieved September 26 2009 Women s Swimming 2009 Archived from the original on October 7 2010 Retrieved September 26 2009 Centennial Conference Individual Men s Swimming Champions 1994 2008 PDF Retrieved September 26 2009 dead link 2012 Mid Atlantic Division Schedule Collegiate Water Polo Association Collegiatewaterpolo org Archived from the original on October 19 2014 Retrieved February 23 2016 Refreshing to www cstv com Archived from the original on October 16 2005 Franklin amp Marshall Shadek Stadium www fandm edu Jack Stripling March 8 2011 Stripling Jack Return of the Greeks Inside Higher Ed Dec 22 2009 Insidehighered com Retrieved March 12 2011 F amp M Fraternity amp Sorority History Archived from the original on August 10 2014 Retrieved August 10 2014 a b c Anson Jack L Marchenasi Robert F eds 1991 1879 Baird s Manual of American College Fraternities 20th ed Indianapolis IN Baird s Manual Foundation Inc pp III 31 ISBN 978 0963715906 Baird s Manual is also available online here The Baird s Manual Online Archive homepage Pilgram Robert J 1930 General register of the members of Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity 1850 1930 Philadelphia Phi Kappa Sigma Fraternity p 190 OCLC 10486816 Rand Frank Prentice Ralph Watts James E Sefton 1993 All The Phi Sigs A History Grand Chapter of Phi Sigma Kappa a b Franklin amp Marshall Signs Licensing Agreement with Italian Clothing Company Press release Franklin amp Marshall College June 25 2003 Archived from the original on December 2 2008 Retrieved December 28 2011 a href Template Cite press release html title Template Cite press release cite press release a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link COUNTRY BEAT Tim McGraw Jeff Carson Tracy Byrd MTV October 9 2001 Retrieved February 23 2016 a b Roggie Alyssa Autumn 2001 What s in a name Franklin amp Marshall magazine Archived from the original on March 24 2012 Retrieved December 28 2011 Luzer Daniel April 2 2010 Franklin amp Marshall s Clothing Line Washington Monthly Archived from the original on April 6 2010 Retrieved December 5 2014 Elbaum Rachel Why do Europeans wear small U S college s logo Today NBC News Archived from the original on January 7 2012 Retrieved December 28 2011 Franklin amp Marshall Becomes Main Sponsor of Hellas Verona Isportconnect com November 29 2013 Retrieved February 23 2016 Coordinates 40 2 49 N 76 19 14 W 40 04694 N 76 32056 W 40 04694 76 32056External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Franklin amp Marshall College Official website Official athletics website Illinois Digital Newspaper Collections F amp M College Reporter 1964 1987 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Franklin 26 Marshall College amp oldid 1151661108, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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