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Wilberforce University

Wilberforce University is a private historically black university in Wilberforce, Ohio. Affiliated with the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME), it was the first college to be owned and operated by African Americans. It participates in the United Negro College Fund.

Wilberforce University
Seal of Wilberforce University
Former names
Wilberforce College (1856–1965)
MottoSuo Marte
Motto in English
By one's own toil, effort, courage
TypePrivate historically black university
Established1856
Religious affiliation
African Methodist Episcopal Church
Academic affiliations
Space-grant
PresidentVann R. Newkirk, Sr.
Students500
Location,
U.S.

39°42′27″N 83°52′50″W / 39.70750°N 83.88056°W / 39.70750; -83.88056
CampusRural
Colors   
Green & Gold
NicknameBulldogs
Sporting affiliations
NAIAMid-South
Websitewww.wilberforce.edu
Carnegie Library (Old Wilberforce University Campus)
Location1055 North Bickett Rd.
Wilberforce, Ohio 45384
Coordinates39°43′04″N 83°52′55″W / 39.7177°N 83.8820°W / 39.7177; -83.8820
Area0.5 acres (0.20 ha)
Built1907
ArchitectDavid Riebel
Architectural styleClassical Revival
NRHP reference No.04000610[1]
Added to NRHPJune 16, 2004

Central State University, also in Wilberforce, Ohio, began as a department of Wilberforce University where Ohio state legislators could sponsor scholarship students.

The college was founded in 1856 by a unique collaboration between the Cincinnati, Ohio, Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church and the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME) to provide classical education and teacher training for black youth. It was named after William Wilberforce. The first board members were leaders both black and white.

The outbreak of the American Civil War (1861–65) resulted in a decline in students from the South, who were the majority, and the college closed in 1862 because of financial losses. The AME Church purchased the institution in 1863 to ensure its survival, making it the first black-owned and operated college in the nation. AME Bishop Daniel Payne was one of the university's original founders and became its first president after re-opening; he was the first African American to become a college president in the United States. After an arson fire in 1865, the college was aided by donations from prominent white supporters and a grant from the US Congress to support rebuilding. Later it received support from the state legislature.

During the 1890s, scholar W. E. B. Du Bois taught at the university. In the late 19th century, it enlarged its mission to include black students from South Africa.

History edit

Wilberforce College was founded to educate African-American students. Twenty years earlier, a similar plan in New Haven, Connecticut, was met with a near-riot (New Haven Excitement), and was quickly abandoned. (See Simeon Jocelyn.) Discrimination against Blacks was legal, and the white colleges that would accept Black students could be counted on one hand (Grinnell College, Iowa (1879, first Graduate); Hillsdale College, Michigan; the Oneida Institute; the Oberlin Collegiate Institute (later Oberlin College); and New-York Central College).

Located three miles (5 km) from the county seat of Xenia, Ohio in the southwestern part of the state, what developed as Wilberforce University was founded as a collaboration among leaders of the Cincinnati Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church and the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME Church). They planned to promote classical education and teacher training for black youth. Among the first 24 members of the tri-racial board of trustees in 1855 were Bishop Daniel A. Payne, Rev. Lewis Woodson, and Messrs. Ishmael Keith and Alfred Anderson, all of the AME Church.[2] Also on the Board were Salmon P. Chase, then Governor of Ohio and a strong supporter of abolition; a member of the Ohio State Legislature, and other Methodist leaders from the white community. They named the college after the British abolitionist and statesman William Wilberforce.[3] Rev Campbell Maxwell later became a trustee in 1896.

As a base for the college, the Cincinnati Conference bought a hotel, cottages and 54 acres (220,000 m2) of a former resort property near Xenia. It was named Tawawa House after the springs in the area, a word derived from a Shawnee term for "clear or golden water". This color was associated with the natural springs nearby because of its high iron content. White people had founded the health resort in 1851 because of the springs, which they also called Yellow Springs. The waters had long been reputed to have health benefits.

Because of its location, this resort area had attracted summer people from both Cincinnati and the South, particularly after completion of the Little Miami Railroad in 1846. Some people in this area of abolitionist sentiment were shocked when wealthy white Southern planters patronized the resort with their entourages of enslaved African-American mistresses and mixed-race "natural" children.[4]

Given migration patterns, this was also an area where numerous free people of color settled, many having moved across the Ohio River from the South to find better work and living conditions. Some were pushed from Southern states, which often required newly manumitted individuals to leave within a certain time period. Xenia had quite a large free black population, as did other towns in southern Ohio, such as Chillicothe, Yellow Springs and Zanesville. Free blacks and anti-slavery white supporters used houses in Xenia as stations on the Underground Railroad in the years before the Civil War. Wilberforce College also supported freedom-seeking slaves. Many of these free people of color were also had Native ancestry, Daniel Payne himself being of Catawba descent.

The college opened for classes in 1856, and by 1858 its trustees selected Rev. Richard S. Rust as the first president.[3] Overriding some protest by men, in the 1850s the college hired Frances E. W. Harper, an abolitionist poet, as the first woman to teach at the school.[5] In 1859 Sarah Jane Woodson began to teach at Wilberforce. She was a 1856 graduate of Oberlin College. She was the youngest sister of one of the original trustees, Rev. Lewis Woodson. She was the first black American to teach at a historically black college or university. She returned to Wilberforce in 1866 after it reopened in a position of greater responsibility. [6]

By 1860 the private university had more than 200 students.[7] It is notable that most were from the South, the "natural" mixed-race sons and daughters of wealthy white planters and their enslaved African-American mistresses.[7] The fathers paid for the educations that were denied their children in the South.[4] They were among the fathers who did not abandon their mixed-race children but provided them with the social capital of education and sometimes property.

The outbreak of the Civil War threatened the college's finances. The Southern planters withdrew their children, and no more paying students came from the South. The Methodist church said it had to divert its resources to support the war. The college closed temporarily in 1862 when the Cincinnati Methodist Church was unable to fund it fully.[4]

 
Daniel Alexander Payne in the early 1890s

Led by Bishop Daniel A. Payne, in 1863 the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME) decided to buy the college to ensure its survival; they paid the cost of its debt. They sold another property to raise the money.[2] Founders were Bishop Payne, who was selected as its president; James A. Shorter, pastor of the AME Church in Zanesville, Ohio and a future bishop; and Dr. John G. Mitchell, principal of the Eastern District Public School of Cincinnati. Payne was the first African American to become a college president in the United States.

When an arson fire damaged some of the buildings in 1865, Payne went to his network to appeal for aid in rebuilding the college. Salmon P. Chase, then Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, and Dr. Charles Avery from Pittsburgh each contributed $10,000 to rebuild the college. Mary E. Monroe, another white supporter, contributed $4200. In addition, the US Congress approved a $25,000 grant for the college, which raised additional monies privately from a wide range of donors.[8]

In 1888 the AME Church came to an agreement with the Republican Party-dominated state legislature that brought considerable financial support and political patronage to the college. It negotiated contemporary pressures to emphasize industrial education for many black youth by accommodating both that and the classical education.

As an act of political patronage, the state legislature established a commercial, normal and industrial (CNI) department at Wilberforce College. While this created complications for administration and questions about the mission of the college, in the near term it brought tens of thousands of dollars annually in state aid to the campus. Each state legislator could award an annual scholarship to the CNI department at Wilberforce, enabling hundreds of African-American students to attend classes. The state-funded students could complete liberal arts at the college, and students at Wilberforce could also take "industrial" classes.[4]

By the mid-1890s, the college also admitted students from South Africa, as part of the AME Church's mission to Africa. The church helped support such students with scholarships, as well as arranging board with local families.[4] An 1898 report published by the AME Church listed the university as having 20 faculty, 334 students, and 246 graduates.[9]

The college became a center of black cultural and intellectual life in southwestern Ohio. Because the area did not receive many European immigrants, blacks had more opportunities at diverse work. Xenia and nearby towns developed a professional black elite.[4]

Generations of leaders: teachers, ministers, doctors, politicians and college administrators, and later men and women of all occupations, have been educated at the university. In the 19th century, Bishop Payne established his dream, a theological seminary, which was named in his honor. Top-ranking scholars taught at the college, including W.E.B. Du Bois, the philologist William S. Scarborough, Edward Clarke, and John G. Mitchell, dean of the seminary. In 1894 Lieutenant Charles Young, the third black graduate of West Point and at the time the only African-American commissioned officer in the US Army, led the newly established military science department.[4]

Additional leading scholars taught at the college in the early 20th century, such as Theophilus Gould Steward, a politician, theologian and missionary; and the sociologist Richard R. Wright, Jr., the first African American to earn a PhD from the University of Pennsylvania. He was a future AME bishop and became president of Wilberforce. These men were also prominent in the American Negro Academy, founded in 1897 to support the work of scholars, writers and other intellectuals.[4] In 1969 the organization was revived as the Black Academy of Arts and Letters.

In 1941, the normal/industrial department was expanded by development of a four-year curriculum. In 1947, this section was split from the university and given independent status. It was renamed as Central State College in 1951. With further development of programs and departments, in 1965 it achieved university status as Central State University.

Growth of Wilberforce University after the mid-20th century led to construction of a new campus in 1967, located one mile (1.6 km) away. In 1974, the area was devastated by an F5 tornado that was part of the 1974 Super Outbreak, which destroyed much of the city of Xenia and the old campus of Wilberforce.

Older campus buildings still in use include the Carnegie Library, built in 1909 with matching funds from the Carnegie Foundation, and listed on the National Register of Historic Places; Shorter Hall, built in 1922; and the Charles Leander Hill Gymnasium, built in 1958. The former residence of Charles Young near Wilberforce was designated as a National Historic Landmark by the US Department of Interior, in recognition of his significant and groundbreaking career in the US Army.

In the 1970s, the university established the National Afro-American Museum and Cultural Center, to provide exhibits and outreach to the region. It is now operated by the Ohio Historical Society. The university also supports the national Association of African American Museums, to provide support and professional guidance especially to smaller museums across the country.[citation needed]

In 2021 the university announced it was cutting tuition by 15% for Ohio residents.[10]

2008 Financial aid audit edit

In 2008 the US Department of Education, Office of the Inspector General (OIG) completed an audit of financial management, specifically the university's management of Title IV funds, which related to its work-study program. For the two-year audit period (2004–2005, 2005–2006) the audit found numerous faults.[11] In summary, the OIG found that the university did not comply with Title IV, HEA requirements because of administrative problems, including staff turnover, insufficient financial aid staff, failure to have written procedures, and lack of communication with other offices. The university worked with auditors to set up appropriate staff and procedures.

Presidents edit

Academics edit

Cooperative education edit

Wilberforce requires all students to participate in cooperative education[21] to meet graduation requirements. The cooperative program places students in internships that provide practical work experience in addition to academic training. It has been a required part of the curriculum at Wilberforce since 1966.[22]

NASA SEMAA project edit

In October 2006, Wilberforce held the grand opening and dedication for the NASA Science, Engineering, Mathematics and Aerospace Academy (SEMAA) and the associated Aerospace Education Laboratory (AEL). It was attended by Dr. Bernice G. Alston, deputy assistant administrator of NASA's office of Education, and the Dave Hobson, U.S. Representative from Ohio's 7th congressional district.[23] NASA's program was designed to provide training in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics to underprivileged students to support NASA's future needs. There were 17 NASA SEMAA project sites through the United States. Through this partnership, Wilberforce offered training sessions for students in grades K-12 during the academic year and during the summer. The AEL is computerized classroom that provided technology to students in grades 7–12 that supported the SEMAA training sessions.

Student activities edit

NPHC organizations edit

All nine of the National Pan-Hellenic Council organizations currently have chapters at Wilberforce University.

Athletics edit

The Wilberforce athletic teams are called the Bulldogs. The university is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing as an NAIA Independent within the Continental Athletic Conference since the 2023–24 academic year; which they were a member on a previous stint from 2012–13 to 2021–22. The Bulldogs previously competed in the Mid-South Conference (MSC) during the 2022–23 school year,[24] and in the defunct American Mideast Conference from 1999–2000 to 2011–12.

Wilberforce competes in 11 intercollegiate varsity sports: Men's sports include basketball, cross country, golf and track & field (indoor and outdoor); while women's sports include basketball, cross country, golf, spirit teams and track & field (indoor and outdoor).

Intramurals edit

Students also participate in the following intramural sports: basketball, softball, volleyball, flag football, and tennis.

Notable alumni edit

Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Victoria Gray Adams Pioneering civil rights activist
Regina M. Anderson Playwright, librarian, and member of the Harlem Renaissance
Helen Elsie Austin 1938 U.S. Foreign Service Officer
Benjamin F. Bowles 1905 University president and founder [25]
Myron (Tiny) Bradshaw Jazz and rhythm and blues bandleader, singer, pianist, and drummer
Gurley Brewer 1888 [26]
Hallie Quinn Brown 1873 Educator, writer and activist
Shontel Brown 2022 Congresswoman
Isaac M. Burgan president of Paul Quinn College 1883-1891, 1911-1914
Richard H. Cain Minister, abolitionist, and United States Representative from South Carolina from 1873–1875 and 1877-1879
Floy Clements First African-American woman to serve in the Illinois House of Representatives (1959-1960) [27][28]
William B. Derrick 1885 Minister, AME bishop
Charity Adams Earley First female African-American officer in the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps; commanding officer of the first battalion of African American women to serve overseas during WWII
Wade Ellis 1928 Twelfth African-American to earn a Ph.D. in mathematics (University of Michigan, 1944). First African-American faculty member at Oberlin College. Former associate dean of graduate studies at the University of Michigan.
Mary G. Evans pastor at Cosmopolitan Community Church in Chicago from 1932 to 1966
Floyd H. Flake U.S. Congressman, Wilberforce President
Frank Foster Musician; member of the Count Basie Orchestra
John R. Fox Recipient of the Medal of Honor
Raymond V. Haysbert Business executive and civil rights leader
Leon Quincy Jackson American architect, professor at Tennessee State University, and an early African American architect in Oklahoma and Tennessee; he did not graduate from Wilberforce University but took classes [29]
Leon Jordan 1932 Politician and civil rights activist; considered one of the most influential African Americans in the history of Kansas City, Missouri
Orchid I. Jordan served in the Missouri House of Representatives from 1970 to 1984
Florence LeSueur The first female NAACP president in 1949, civil right leader and activist. [30]
James H. McGee City commissioner and first African American mayor of Dayton, Ohio
Arnett "Ace" Mumford 1924 Former college football coach at Southern University from 1936 to 1961. He also coached at Jarvis Christian College, Bishop College, Texas College; member of College Football Hall of Fame
Demetrius Newton Civil rights attorney [31]
Bill Powell Owner and designer of Clearview Golf Club, the first integrated golf course in America and the first owned and designed by an African American [32]
Leontyne Price Opera singer and first African American prima donna of the Metropolitan Opera
Henry Richardson 1943 First African American state legislator in New Hampshire
George Russell Jazz composer and theorist
Green Pinckney Russell 1913 American school administrator, college president, and teacher [33]
Jimmy Rushing Blues musician
Bayard Rustin Labor leader, civil rights organizer [34]
Susie Lankford Shorter writer, educator [35]
Theophilus Gould Steward 1881 U.S. Army chaplain and Buffalo Soldier
William Grant Still Composer and conductor; the first African American to conduct a major American orchestra, the first to have a symphony performed by a leading orchestra, and the first to have an opera performed by a major opera company
Ossian Sweet African-American doctor notable for self-defense in 1925 against a white mob's attempt to force him out of his Detroit neighborhood, and acquittal at trial
Dorothy Vaughan 1929 American mathematician whose work at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics (NACA), predecessor agency to NASA; inspired the 2016 biographical drama film Hidden Figures
Ben Webster American jazz musician
Milton Wright 1926 Economist

See also edit

Representation in other media edit

  • Dolen Perkins-Valdez's novel Wench (2010) explores the lives of several enslaved women of color brought to the Tawawa House resort during the summers by their Southern white masters. They were among the visitors in the years before the property was bought for use as the college.[36][37]

References edit

  1. ^ "National Register Information System – (#04000610)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. ^ a b Campbell (1995), Songs of Zion, pp. 263
  3. ^ a b Talbert, Horace (2000). "The Sons of Allen: Together with a Sketch of the Rise and Progress of Wilberforce University, Wilberforce, Ohio 1906". Documenting the South. University of North Carolina. pp. 264–268, 273. Retrieved July 25, 2008.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h James T. Campbell, Songs of Zion, New York: Oxford University Press, 1995, pp. 259–260, accessed Jan 13, 2009
  5. ^ Boyd, Melba Joyce. Discarded Legacy: Politics and Poetics in the Life of Frances E. W. Harper 1825-1911. Detroit: Wayne State University, 1994, pp. 38.
  6. ^ Woodson, Byron, "This land... is now our mother country..." (Chapel Hill, Wisdom Books, 2022) , 125.
  7. ^ a b Talbert (1906), Sons of Allen, p. 267
  8. ^ Horace Talbert, The Sons of Allen: Together with a Sketch of the Rise and Progress of Wilberforce University, Wilberforce, Ohio, 1906, p. 273, Documenting the South, 2000, University of North Carolina, accessed Jul 25, 2008
  9. ^ Hawkins, John R., ed. (1898). "Our Schools from Latest Reports". The Educator. Educational Department of the A.M.E. Church. 1 (1): 47.
  10. ^ "Wilberforce to cut tuition by 15% for in-state students". Dayton Daily News. June 25, 2021. Retrieved June 25, 2021.
  11. ^ "Wilberforce University's Administration of the Title IV, Higher Education Act Programs: Final Audit Report" (PDF).
  12. ^ . Wilberforce University. Archived from the original on June 15, 2010. Retrieved March 24, 2010.
  13. ^ "Dr. Rembert E. Stokes". Dayton Walk of Fame. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  14. ^ "Dr. John Henderson". University of Cincinnati. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  15. ^ Wilberforce University Catalog, 2017-2018 (PDF). Wilberforce University. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  16. ^ Pant, Meagan (July 17, 2013). "Wilberforce University president to step down". mydaytondailynews. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  17. ^ Baker, Wayne. "Dr. Algeania Warren Freeman Named 20th President of Wilberforce University". Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  18. ^ a b Staff, AFRO (July 22, 2016). "Herman Felton Jr. Named President of Ohio's Wilberforce University | Afro". Afro. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  19. ^ "Board of Trustees Announce Executive Vice President and Provost as 22nd President of Wilberforce University – Wilberforce University". wilberforce.edu. Retrieved January 15, 2018.
  20. ^ "President's Corner - Wilberforce University". June 6, 2016. Retrieved August 9, 2023.
  21. ^ . Wilberforce University. Archived from the original on February 26, 2007. Retrieved January 1, 2007.
  22. ^ "Wilberforce Dared to Go Co-Op All the Way". Vol. 27, no. 8. Johnson Publishing Company. Ebony. June 1972. p. 86. Retrieved May 3, 2017.
  23. ^ . National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Archived from the original on November 16, 2006. Retrieved January 1, 2007.
  24. ^ Wilberforce Joins The Mid-South Conference | Mid-South Conference
  25. ^ Mather, Frank Lincoln (1915). Who's Who of the Colored Race: A General Biographical Dictionary of Men and Women of African Descent. Vol. 1. Chicago, Illinois. p. 32.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  26. ^ "First of the Kind in That Section," Indianapolis Journal, Feb. 12, 1890, pg. 2.
  27. ^ Musser, Ashley; Dutton, Julie (February 11, 2016). "Illinois Women in Congress and General Assembly" (PDF). Springfield, Illinois: Illinois Legislative Research Unit. Retrieved August 21, 2017.
  28. ^ Bone, Jan, ed. (June 1974). "Commission on the Status of Women. Report and Recommendations to the Governor and the General Assembly" (PDF). Springfield, Illinois: Illinois Commission on the Status of Women. p. 26. Retrieved August 21, 2017.
  29. ^ "Receives Masters in Architecture". The Black Dispatch. September 11, 1954. p. 1. Retrieved January 25, 2023.
  30. ^ . June 29, 1991. Archived from the original on February 19, 2018. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  31. ^ "Rep. Demetrius Newton, first black pro tem in Alabama House, has died (updated)". September 11, 2013.
  32. ^ . Morning Journal News. January 2, 2010. Archived from the original on November 11, 2013.
  33. ^ Hardin, John A. (1995). "Green Pinckney Russell of Kentucky Normal and Industrial Institute for Colored Persons". Journal of Black Studies. 25 (5): 610–621. doi:10.1177/002193479502500506. ISSN 0021-9347. JSTOR 2784634. S2CID 143448048.
  34. ^ . Wilberforce Payne Unified Library. January 2, 2010. Archived from the original on October 30, 2020.
  35. ^ Hallie Q. Brown, Homespun Heroines and Other Women of Distinction (Oxford University Press 1988): 205-206. ISBN 9780199763092
  36. ^ O'Neal Parker, Lonnae. "A tender spot in master-slave relations". Washington Post. Retrieved April 15, 2015.
  37. ^ Nelson, Samantha (January 28, 2010). "Dolen Perkins-Valdez: Wench". The A.V. Club. Retrieved April 15, 2015.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • Official athletics website
  • Horace Talbert, The Sons of Allen: Together with a Sketch of the Rise and Progress of Wilberforce University, Wilberforce, Ohio, 1906, Documenting the American South, University of North Carolina

wilberforce, university, confused, with, central, state, university, private, historically, black, university, wilberforce, ohio, affiliated, with, african, methodist, episcopal, church, first, college, owned, operated, african, americans, participates, united. Not to be confused with Central State University Wilberforce University is a private historically black university in Wilberforce Ohio Affiliated with the African Methodist Episcopal Church AME it was the first college to be owned and operated by African Americans It participates in the United Negro College Fund Wilberforce UniversitySeal of Wilberforce UniversityFormer namesWilberforce College 1856 1965 MottoSuo MarteMotto in EnglishBy one s own toil effort courageTypePrivate historically black universityEstablished1856Religious affiliationAfrican Methodist Episcopal ChurchAcademic affiliationsSpace grantPresidentVann R Newkirk Sr Students500LocationWilberforce Ohio U S 39 42 27 N 83 52 50 W 39 70750 N 83 88056 W 39 70750 83 88056CampusRuralColors Green amp GoldNicknameBulldogsSporting affiliationsNAIA Mid SouthWebsitewww wbr wilberforce wbr eduCarnegie Library Old Wilberforce University Campus U S National Register of Historic PlacesShow map of OhioShow map of the United StatesLocation1055 North Bickett Rd Wilberforce Ohio 45384Coordinates39 43 04 N 83 52 55 W 39 7177 N 83 8820 W 39 7177 83 8820Area0 5 acres 0 20 ha Built1907ArchitectDavid RiebelArchitectural styleClassical RevivalNRHP reference No 04000610 1 Added to NRHPJune 16 2004Central State University also in Wilberforce Ohio began as a department of Wilberforce University where Ohio state legislators could sponsor scholarship students The college was founded in 1856 by a unique collaboration between the Cincinnati Ohio Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church and the African Methodist Episcopal Church AME to provide classical education and teacher training for black youth It was named after William Wilberforce The first board members were leaders both black and white The outbreak of the American Civil War 1861 65 resulted in a decline in students from the South who were the majority and the college closed in 1862 because of financial losses The AME Church purchased the institution in 1863 to ensure its survival making it the first black owned and operated college in the nation AME Bishop Daniel Payne was one of the university s original founders and became its first president after re opening he was the first African American to become a college president in the United States After an arson fire in 1865 the college was aided by donations from prominent white supporters and a grant from the US Congress to support rebuilding Later it received support from the state legislature During the 1890s scholar W E B Du Bois taught at the university In the late 19th century it enlarged its mission to include black students from South Africa Contents 1 History 1 1 2008 Financial aid audit 1 2 Presidents 2 Academics 2 1 Cooperative education 2 2 NASA SEMAA project 3 Student activities 3 1 NPHC organizations 4 Athletics 4 1 Intramurals 5 Notable alumni 6 See also 7 Representation in other media 8 References 9 External linksHistory editWilberforce College was founded to educate African American students Twenty years earlier a similar plan in New Haven Connecticut was met with a near riot New Haven Excitement and was quickly abandoned See Simeon Jocelyn Discrimination against Blacks was legal and the white colleges that would accept Black students could be counted on one hand Grinnell College Iowa 1879 first Graduate Hillsdale College Michigan the Oneida Institute the Oberlin Collegiate Institute later Oberlin College and New York Central College Located three miles 5 km from the county seat of Xenia Ohio in the southwestern part of the state what developed as Wilberforce University was founded as a collaboration among leaders of the Cincinnati Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church and the African Methodist Episcopal Church AME Church They planned to promote classical education and teacher training for black youth Among the first 24 members of the tri racial board of trustees in 1855 were Bishop Daniel A Payne Rev Lewis Woodson and Messrs Ishmael Keith and Alfred Anderson all of the AME Church 2 Also on the Board were Salmon P Chase then Governor of Ohio and a strong supporter of abolition a member of the Ohio State Legislature and other Methodist leaders from the white community They named the college after the British abolitionist and statesman William Wilberforce 3 Rev Campbell Maxwell later became a trustee in 1896 As a base for the college the Cincinnati Conference bought a hotel cottages and 54 acres 220 000 m2 of a former resort property near Xenia It was named Tawawa House after the springs in the area a word derived from a Shawnee term for clear or golden water This color was associated with the natural springs nearby because of its high iron content White people had founded the health resort in 1851 because of the springs which they also called Yellow Springs The waters had long been reputed to have health benefits Because of its location this resort area had attracted summer people from both Cincinnati and the South particularly after completion of the Little Miami Railroad in 1846 Some people in this area of abolitionist sentiment were shocked when wealthy white Southern planters patronized the resort with their entourages of enslaved African American mistresses and mixed race natural children 4 Given migration patterns this was also an area where numerous free people of color settled many having moved across the Ohio River from the South to find better work and living conditions Some were pushed from Southern states which often required newly manumitted individuals to leave within a certain time period Xenia had quite a large free black population as did other towns in southern Ohio such as Chillicothe Yellow Springs and Zanesville Free blacks and anti slavery white supporters used houses in Xenia as stations on the Underground Railroad in the years before the Civil War Wilberforce College also supported freedom seeking slaves Many of these free people of color were also had Native ancestry Daniel Payne himself being of Catawba descent The college opened for classes in 1856 and by 1858 its trustees selected Rev Richard S Rust as the first president 3 Overriding some protest by men in the 1850s the college hired Frances E W Harper an abolitionist poet as the first woman to teach at the school 5 In 1859 Sarah Jane Woodson began to teach at Wilberforce She was a 1856 graduate of Oberlin College She was the youngest sister of one of the original trustees Rev Lewis Woodson She was the first black American to teach at a historically black college or university She returned to Wilberforce in 1866 after it reopened in a position of greater responsibility 6 By 1860 the private university had more than 200 students 7 It is notable that most were from the South the natural mixed race sons and daughters of wealthy white planters and their enslaved African American mistresses 7 The fathers paid for the educations that were denied their children in the South 4 They were among the fathers who did not abandon their mixed race children but provided them with the social capital of education and sometimes property The outbreak of the Civil War threatened the college s finances The Southern planters withdrew their children and no more paying students came from the South The Methodist church said it had to divert its resources to support the war The college closed temporarily in 1862 when the Cincinnati Methodist Church was unable to fund it fully 4 nbsp Daniel Alexander Payne in the early 1890sLed by Bishop Daniel A Payne in 1863 the African Methodist Episcopal Church AME decided to buy the college to ensure its survival they paid the cost of its debt They sold another property to raise the money 2 Founders were Bishop Payne who was selected as its president James A Shorter pastor of the AME Church in Zanesville Ohio and a future bishop and Dr John G Mitchell principal of the Eastern District Public School of Cincinnati Payne was the first African American to become a college president in the United States When an arson fire damaged some of the buildings in 1865 Payne went to his network to appeal for aid in rebuilding the college Salmon P Chase then Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States and Dr Charles Avery from Pittsburgh each contributed 10 000 to rebuild the college Mary E Monroe another white supporter contributed 4200 In addition the US Congress approved a 25 000 grant for the college which raised additional monies privately from a wide range of donors 8 In 1888 the AME Church came to an agreement with the Republican Party dominated state legislature that brought considerable financial support and political patronage to the college It negotiated contemporary pressures to emphasize industrial education for many black youth by accommodating both that and the classical education As an act of political patronage the state legislature established a commercial normal and industrial CNI department at Wilberforce College While this created complications for administration and questions about the mission of the college in the near term it brought tens of thousands of dollars annually in state aid to the campus Each state legislator could award an annual scholarship to the CNI department at Wilberforce enabling hundreds of African American students to attend classes The state funded students could complete liberal arts at the college and students at Wilberforce could also take industrial classes 4 By the mid 1890s the college also admitted students from South Africa as part of the AME Church s mission to Africa The church helped support such students with scholarships as well as arranging board with local families 4 An 1898 report published by the AME Church listed the university as having 20 faculty 334 students and 246 graduates 9 The college became a center of black cultural and intellectual life in southwestern Ohio Because the area did not receive many European immigrants blacks had more opportunities at diverse work Xenia and nearby towns developed a professional black elite 4 Generations of leaders teachers ministers doctors politicians and college administrators and later men and women of all occupations have been educated at the university In the 19th century Bishop Payne established his dream a theological seminary which was named in his honor Top ranking scholars taught at the college including W E B Du Bois the philologist William S Scarborough Edward Clarke and John G Mitchell dean of the seminary In 1894 Lieutenant Charles Young the third black graduate of West Point and at the time the only African American commissioned officer in the US Army led the newly established military science department 4 Additional leading scholars taught at the college in the early 20th century such as Theophilus Gould Steward a politician theologian and missionary and the sociologist Richard R Wright Jr the first African American to earn a PhD from the University of Pennsylvania He was a future AME bishop and became president of Wilberforce These men were also prominent in the American Negro Academy founded in 1897 to support the work of scholars writers and other intellectuals 4 In 1969 the organization was revived as the Black Academy of Arts and Letters In 1941 the normal industrial department was expanded by development of a four year curriculum In 1947 this section was split from the university and given independent status It was renamed as Central State College in 1951 With further development of programs and departments in 1965 it achieved university status as Central State University Growth of Wilberforce University after the mid 20th century led to construction of a new campus in 1967 located one mile 1 6 km away In 1974 the area was devastated by an F5 tornado that was part of the 1974 Super Outbreak which destroyed much of the city of Xenia and the old campus of Wilberforce Older campus buildings still in use include the Carnegie Library built in 1909 with matching funds from the Carnegie Foundation and listed on the National Register of Historic Places Shorter Hall built in 1922 and the Charles Leander Hill Gymnasium built in 1958 The former residence of Charles Young near Wilberforce was designated as a National Historic Landmark by the US Department of Interior in recognition of his significant and groundbreaking career in the US Army In the 1970s the university established the National Afro American Museum and Cultural Center to provide exhibits and outreach to the region It is now operated by the Ohio Historical Society The university also supports the national Association of African American Museums to provide support and professional guidance especially to smaller museums across the country citation needed In 2021 the university announced it was cutting tuition by 15 for Ohio residents 10 2008 Financial aid audit edit In 2008 the US Department of Education Office of the Inspector General OIG completed an audit of financial management specifically the university s management of Title IV funds which related to its work study program For the two year audit period 2004 2005 2005 2006 the audit found numerous faults 11 In summary the OIG found that the university did not comply with Title IV HEA requirements because of administrative problems including staff turnover insufficient financial aid staff failure to have written procedures and lack of communication with other offices The university worked with auditors to set up appropriate staff and procedures Presidents edit Richard Rust 1858 1862 under the joint board of trustees representing the Methodist Episcopal and African Methodist Episcopal churches Daniel A Payne 1863 1876 first president of the college under AME operation Benjamin F Lee 1876 1884 Samuel T Mitchell 1884 1900 Joshua H Jones 1900 1908 William S Scarborough 1908 1920 John A Gregg 1920 1924 Gilbert H Jones 1924 1932 Richard R Wright Jr 1932 1936 1941 1942 D Ormonde Walker 1936 1941 Charles H Wesley 1942 1947 Charles Leander Hill 1947 1956 12 Rembert E Stokes 1956 1976 13 Charles E Taylor 1976 1984 Yvonne Walker Taylor 1984 1988 John L Henderson 1988 2002 14 15 Floyd Flake 2002 2008 Patricia Hardaway 2009 2013 16 Wilma Mishoe interim Algeania Marie Warren Freeman 2014 2016 17 18 Herman J Felton Jr 2016 2018 18 Elfred Anthony Pinkard 2018 2023 19 Vann R Newkirk Sr 2023 present 20 Academics editCooperative education edit Wilberforce requires all students to participate in cooperative education 21 to meet graduation requirements The cooperative program places students in internships that provide practical work experience in addition to academic training It has been a required part of the curriculum at Wilberforce since 1966 22 NASA SEMAA project edit In October 2006 Wilberforce held the grand opening and dedication for the NASA Science Engineering Mathematics and Aerospace Academy SEMAA and the associated Aerospace Education Laboratory AEL It was attended by Dr Bernice G Alston deputy assistant administrator of NASA s office of Education and the Dave Hobson U S Representative from Ohio s 7th congressional district 23 NASA s program was designed to provide training in science technology engineering and mathematics to underprivileged students to support NASA s future needs There were 17 NASA SEMAA project sites through the United States Through this partnership Wilberforce offered training sessions for students in grades K 12 during the academic year and during the summer The AEL is computerized classroom that provided technology to students in grades 7 12 that supported the SEMAA training sessions Student activities editNPHC organizations edit All nine of the National Pan Hellenic Council organizations currently have chapters at Wilberforce University Athletics editThe Wilberforce athletic teams are called the Bulldogs The university is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics NAIA primarily competing as an NAIA Independent within the Continental Athletic Conference since the 2023 24 academic year which they were a member on a previous stint from 2012 13 to 2021 22 The Bulldogs previously competed in the Mid South Conference MSC during the 2022 23 school year 24 and in the defunct American Mideast Conference from 1999 2000 to 2011 12 Wilberforce competes in 11 intercollegiate varsity sports Men s sports include basketball cross country golf and track amp field indoor and outdoor while women s sports include basketball cross country golf spirit teams and track amp field indoor and outdoor Intramurals edit Students also participate in the following intramural sports basketball softball volleyball flag football and tennis Notable alumni editName Class year Notability Reference s Victoria Gray Adams Pioneering civil rights activistRegina M Anderson Playwright librarian and member of the Harlem RenaissanceHelen Elsie Austin 1938 U S Foreign Service OfficerBenjamin F Bowles 1905 University president and founder 25 Myron Tiny Bradshaw Jazz and rhythm and blues bandleader singer pianist and drummerGurley Brewer 1888 26 Hallie Quinn Brown 1873 Educator writer and activistShontel Brown 2022 CongresswomanIsaac M Burgan president of Paul Quinn College 1883 1891 1911 1914Richard H Cain Minister abolitionist and United States Representative from South Carolina from 1873 1875 and 1877 1879Floy Clements First African American woman to serve in the Illinois House of Representatives 1959 1960 27 28 William B Derrick 1885 Minister AME bishopCharity Adams Earley First female African American officer in the Women s Army Auxiliary Corps commanding officer of the first battalion of African American women to serve overseas during WWIIWade Ellis 1928 Twelfth African American to earn a Ph D in mathematics University of Michigan 1944 First African American faculty member at Oberlin College Former associate dean of graduate studies at the University of Michigan Mary G Evans pastor at Cosmopolitan Community Church in Chicago from 1932 to 1966Floyd H Flake U S Congressman Wilberforce PresidentFrank Foster Musician member of the Count Basie OrchestraJohn R Fox Recipient of the Medal of HonorRaymond V Haysbert Business executive and civil rights leaderLeon Quincy Jackson American architect professor at Tennessee State University and an early African American architect in Oklahoma and Tennessee he did not graduate from Wilberforce University but took classes 29 Leon Jordan 1932 Politician and civil rights activist considered one of the most influential African Americans in the history of Kansas City MissouriOrchid I Jordan served in the Missouri House of Representatives from 1970 to 1984Florence LeSueur The first female NAACP president in 1949 civil right leader and activist 30 James H McGee City commissioner and first African American mayor of Dayton OhioArnett Ace Mumford 1924 Former college football coach at Southern University from 1936 to 1961 He also coached at Jarvis Christian College Bishop College Texas College member of College Football Hall of FameDemetrius Newton Civil rights attorney 31 Bill Powell Owner and designer of Clearview Golf Club the first integrated golf course in America and the first owned and designed by an African American 32 Leontyne Price Opera singer and first African American prima donna of the Metropolitan OperaHenry Richardson 1943 First African American state legislator in New HampshireGeorge Russell Jazz composer and theoristGreen Pinckney Russell 1913 American school administrator college president and teacher 33 Jimmy Rushing Blues musicianBayard Rustin Labor leader civil rights organizer 34 Susie Lankford Shorter writer educator 35 Theophilus Gould Steward 1881 U S Army chaplain and Buffalo SoldierWilliam Grant Still Composer and conductor the first African American to conduct a major American orchestra the first to have a symphony performed by a leading orchestra and the first to have an opera performed by a major opera companyOssian Sweet African American doctor notable for self defense in 1925 against a white mob s attempt to force him out of his Detroit neighborhood and acquittal at trialDorothy Vaughan 1929 American mathematician whose work at the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics NACA predecessor agency to NASA inspired the 2016 biographical drama film Hidden FiguresBen Webster American jazz musicianMilton Wright 1926 EconomistSee also editHistorically black colleges and universitiesRepresentation in other media editDolen Perkins Valdez s novel Wench 2010 explores the lives of several enslaved women of color brought to the Tawawa House resort during the summers by their Southern white masters They were among the visitors in the years before the property was bought for use as the college 36 37 References edit National Register Information System 04000610 National Register of Historic Places National Park Service March 13 2009 a b Campbell 1995 Songs of Zion pp 263 a b Talbert Horace 2000 The Sons of Allen Together with a Sketch of the Rise and Progress of Wilberforce University Wilberforce Ohio 1906 Documenting the South University of North Carolina pp 264 268 273 Retrieved July 25 2008 a b c d e f g h James T Campbell Songs of Zion New York Oxford University Press 1995 pp 259 260 accessed Jan 13 2009 Boyd Melba Joyce Discarded Legacy Politics and Poetics in the Life of Frances E W Harper 1825 1911 Detroit Wayne State University 1994 pp 38 Woodson Byron This land is now our mother country Chapel Hill Wisdom Books 2022 125 a b Talbert 1906 Sons of Allen p 267 Horace Talbert The Sons of Allen Together with a Sketch of the Rise and Progress of Wilberforce University Wilberforce Ohio 1906 p 273 Documenting the South 2000 University of North Carolina accessed Jul 25 2008 Hawkins John R ed 1898 Our Schools from Latest Reports The Educator Educational Department of the A M E Church 1 1 47 Wilberforce to cut tuition by 15 for in state students Dayton Daily News June 25 2021 Retrieved June 25 2021 Wilberforce University s Administration of the Title IV Higher Education Act Programs Final Audit Report PDF Library Wilberforce University Archived from the original on June 15 2010 Retrieved March 24 2010 Dr Rembert E Stokes Dayton Walk of Fame Retrieved January 15 2018 Dr John Henderson University of Cincinnati Retrieved January 15 2018 Wilberforce University Catalog 2017 2018 PDF Wilberforce University Retrieved January 15 2018 Pant Meagan July 17 2013 Wilberforce University president to step down mydaytondailynews Retrieved January 15 2018 Baker Wayne Dr Algeania Warren Freeman Named 20th President of Wilberforce University Retrieved January 15 2018 a b Staff AFRO July 22 2016 Herman Felton Jr Named President of Ohio s Wilberforce University Afro Afro Retrieved January 15 2018 Board of Trustees Announce Executive Vice President and Provost as 22nd President of Wilberforce University Wilberforce University wilberforce edu Retrieved January 15 2018 President s Corner Wilberforce University June 6 2016 Retrieved August 9 2023 Wilberforce University Yesterday and Today Wilberforce University Archived from the original on February 26 2007 Retrieved January 1 2007 Wilberforce Dared to Go Co Op All the Way Vol 27 no 8 Johnson Publishing Company Ebony June 1972 p 86 Retrieved May 3 2017 NASA Education Facility Opens at Wilberforce University National Aeronautics and Space Administration NASA Archived from the original on November 16 2006 Retrieved January 1 2007 Wilberforce Joins The Mid South Conference Mid South Conference Mather Frank Lincoln 1915 Who s Who of the Colored Race A General Biographical Dictionary of Men and Women of African Descent Vol 1 Chicago Illinois p 32 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link First of the Kind in That Section Indianapolis Journal Feb 12 1890 pg 2 Musser Ashley Dutton Julie February 11 2016 Illinois Women in Congress and General Assembly PDF Springfield Illinois Illinois Legislative Research Unit Retrieved August 21 2017 Bone Jan ed June 1974 Commission on the Status of Women Report and Recommendations to the Governor and the General Assembly PDF Springfield Illinois Illinois Commission on the Status of Women p 26 Retrieved August 21 2017 Receives Masters in Architecture The Black Dispatch September 11 1954 p 1 Retrieved January 25 2023 Florence Lesueur ex president director of NAACP branch at 93 June 29 1991 Archived from the original on February 19 2018 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Rep Demetrius Newton first black pro tem in Alabama House has died updated September 11 2013 Golf Pioneer Dies Morning Journal News January 2 2010 Archived from the original on November 11 2013 Hardin John A 1995 Green Pinckney Russell of Kentucky Normal and Industrial Institute for Colored Persons Journal of Black Studies 25 5 610 621 doi 10 1177 002193479502500506 ISSN 0021 9347 JSTOR 2784634 S2CID 143448048 History of Wilberforce University Bayard Rustin Wilberforce Payne Unified Library January 2 2010 Archived from the original on October 30 2020 Hallie Q Brown Homespun Heroines and Other Women of Distinction Oxford University Press 1988 205 206 ISBN 9780199763092 O Neal Parker Lonnae A tender spot in master slave relations Washington Post Retrieved April 15 2015 Nelson Samantha January 28 2010 Dolen Perkins Valdez Wench The A V Club Retrieved April 15 2015 External links editOfficial website Official athletics website Horace Talbert The Sons of Allen Together with a Sketch of the Rise and Progress of Wilberforce University Wilberforce Ohio 1906 Documenting the American South University of North Carolina Portals nbsp Ohio nbsp United States nbsp ChristianityWilberforce University at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wilberforce University amp oldid 1205979748, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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