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NGE >> Education >> Colleges and Universities >> Public Higher Education >> State Universities >> Augusta State University |
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Augusta State University Augusta
Richmond Academy The university dates its formal beginning to 1925, when the Junior College of Augusta (JCA) was created from the Academy of Richmond County (ARC). The academy, established by the state legislature as a college-preparatory school for boys, opened in 1785, the same year that the legislature authorized a university system to be made up of public academies and a capstone college. The only unit of the system in existence at that time and for several years following was ARC. In 1787 Connecticut native Abraham Baldwin—
Even after the 1801 opening of the University of Georgia in Athens, ARC continued to offer college
After
Junior College of Augusta In 1924 Butler traveled to Columbia University in New York City to learn about the junior college movement, and Richmond County's board of education subsequently established the Junior College of Augusta (JCA) on August 15, 1925. ARC and JCA agreed to share facilities under the condition that the college's operation would in no way interfere with that of the academy, as insisted upon by ARC's trustees. Women, who were barred from ARC, would be admitted to JCA, although primarily for a practical reason: a large new building for the college had been constructed and needed to be filled. In 1930 James Lister Skinner became the second president of JCA. During his appointment maximum salaries decreased as a result of the Great Depression. Additionally, JCA's mission, enrollment, and curriculum remained static while ARC's enrollment grew. Skinner postponed a forced departure of the college from the academy by securing a grant from the federal government's Public Works Administration, one of U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal Agencies, to enlarge the premises. In 1938 Eric Hardy succeeded Skinner as JCA's president. Hardy, who valued job placement as much as senior-college placement, incorporated vocational training into the curriculum. In 1946 he initiated an evening school that catered to returning veterans of World War II (1941-45), and the University of Georgia began offering extension courses at JCA in 1947. Hardy retired in 1954, and Anton Markert succeeded him. By that time increasing enrollment at ARC and at JCA threatened the accreditation of both institutions, and the Trustees of Richmond Academy demanded that JCA move to another location. The Richmond County Board of Education offered JCA to the Georgia Baptist Convention, but the organization declined the offer. When
Augusta College Georgia senator and Augusta native Carl Sanders took the lead in enacting the 1958 law that permitted junior colleges to enter the University System of Georgia under the Board of Regents. The regents assumed control of JCA from the Richmond County Board of Education on September 1, 1958, and changed the school's name to Augusta College. In 1963 the regents authorized the college's addition of junior- and senior-level courses and the awarding of baccalaureate degrees. A fine arts complex, including a performing arts theater, was added in 1968. Despite these achievements, the school suffered embarrassment during Robin's administration when he hired faculty—including a dean—who had falsely claimed to hold doctoral degrees. The college also struggled to shed the "high school" reputation it had acquired during its long association with ARC. Following Robins's resignation in 1970, the Board of Regents named George A. Christenberry as president.
Christenberry
In 1995
Augusta State University On June 12, 1996, the Board of Regents authorized a name change for senior colleges in the University System of Georgia, and Augusta College became Augusta State University. In that same year the Center for the Study of Georgia History was established, and Augusta State awarded its first honorary doctorate to Katherine Pamplin. The following February U.S. president Bill Clinton used Augusta State's athletic complex to announce a new educational program modeled on Georgia's HOPE scholarships. On
Suggested Reading Edward J. Cashin with Helen Callahan, A History of Augusta College (Augusta, Ga.: Augusta College Press, 1976). Edward J. Cashin, Augusta State University Published 6/3/2005 |
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