Lynchburg College

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Coordinates: 37°23′55″N 79°10′52″W / 37.398468, -79.18101 (Lynchburg College)

Lynchburg College

Established: 1903
Type: Private
President: Kenneth R. Garren
Faculty: 159 full time
Students: 2,400
Location: Lynchburg, Virginia, United States
Colors: Crimson and Gray
Nickname: LC
Mascot: Hornets
Affiliations: Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
Website: http://www.lynchburg.edu

Lynchburg College is a private college in Lynchburg, Virginia, USA, related by covenant to the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) with approximately 2,400 undergraduate and graduate students. The Princeton Review lists it as one of the 361 best colleges in the nation, though according to data provided by the Princeton Review, average SAT scores for incoming Lynchburg College students are the third lowest among these 361 schools. The average SAT score is 516 for both reading and math. [1]. U.S. News & World Report ranked Lynchburg in the first tier of Southern colleges and universities offering a full range of undergraduate programs and master's degrees. A total of 574 institutions are in this category. The College Board puts the College's average SAT scores for the middle 50% of incoming freshman at 460 - 570 math and 450 - 550 for writing [2].

Lynchburg College is listed in Loren Pope's Colleges That Change Lives.

Contents

[edit] History

Presidents of Lynchburg College
Dr. Josephus Hopwood 1903-1911
Dr. S.T. Willis 1911-1912
Mr. G.O. Davis 1912-1914
Mr. Matthew Clark (Acting) 1914-1915
Dr. John T. Hundley 1915-1936
Dr. Riley B. Montgomery 1936-1949
Dr. Orville W. Wake '32 1949-1964
Dr. M. Carey Brewer '49 1964-1983
Dr. George N. Rainsford 1983-1993
Dr. Charles O. Warren 1993-2001
Dr. Kenneth R. Garren 2001-present

Lynchburg College was founded in 1903 by Dr. Josephus Hopwood as a selective, independent, coeducational, and residential institution, which has a historical and current relationship to the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). Hopwood was president of Milligan College in Tennessee when a group of ministers and businessmen approached him about establishing a college in Lynchburg. A key to the founding was that Westover Hotel, a failed resort, was available for sale. When Hopwood agreed to serve, they purchased the resort for $13,500, resulting in Lynchburg's current campus.

The College has maintained its original commitment to a liberal arts education. Beginning with 11 faculty and 55 students, the College has grown to 159 full-time faculty and 2,400 undergraduate and graduate students. The College offers 35 majors, 43 minors, two dual-degree programs, the Westover Honors Program, and graduate study in business and education. Lynchburg College has more than 20,000 alumni.

The Lynchburg College hymn was written by alumnus Paul E. Waters. Its melody was borrowed from JS Bach's "O Haupt voll Blut und Wunden" Op. 135a, No. 21.

In the fall of 1994,a few months after Intel had introduced its Pentium microprocessor, Dr. Thomas R. Nicely, from Lynchburg College, was doing computations related to the distribution of prime numbers and discovered the Pentium FDIV bug. Dr. Nicely left Lynchburg College in 2000.

In 1997, Dr. Leonard Edelman was denied tenure by then-Dean of the College and he filed a lawsuit against the college for religious and gender discrimination. However, the filing was made beyond the allowable limit as provided for by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission. Edelmen filed a petition for re-consideration, and his lawsuit went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. The court ruled against his extension request, and not on the merit of his tenure-denial claim.[3]

In 2003, Dr. Patty Hale was awarded the Carnegie Foundation award for U.S. Professor of the Year. Dr. Hale then left Lynchburg College in 2006 to become Coordinator of the Graduate Nursing Program at James Madison University.

In 2007, Dean of the College, Dr. Vernon Miles, was fired by President Garren. He was replaced by Dr. Julius Sigler, former Dean of the School of Sciences.

Community outreach remains a tradition of the College, through initiatives of its eight Centers of Lynchburg College and the SERVE program, through which 30,000 volunteer hours are contributed annually by students, faculty, and staff.

[edit] Campus and Campus Life

Located in an urban setting, Lynchburg College occupies 214 acres in Lynchburg and has a separate environmental research center on 470 acres, the Claytor Nature Study Center, located about 40 minutes from campus. Most students live on campus and in nearby college-owned houses.

[edit] Administration

Dr. Kenneth R. Garren began his tenure as the tenth president of Lynchburg College in 2001. A former vice president and dean of Roanoke College, Garren led Lynchburg College through its 2003 centennial celebration and initiatives such as a strategic plan, campus facilities master planning, building projects (including Elliot & Rosel Schewel Hall), and restoration work on College Lake. Recently, the college finished a multimillion dollar renovation on Shellenberger Field.

[edit] Famous Alumni

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Name Known for Relationship to Lynchburg College
M. Carey Brewer President emeritus of Lynchburg College BA 1949
Joan Foster Mayor, City of Lynchburg, Va. 1969, 1970
David G. Longfellow Senior coordinator, Carcinogenisis Cancer, National Cancer Institute 1969
Catherine German West former executive vice president and chief operating officer of JC Penney Co. 1982
Robert A. McKee Representative for Maryland House of Delegates B.A. in political science in 1971[1]
Travis Milton Novelist and Chief Operating Officer of Holden Bros. Old Fashioned Cookies B.A in Philosophy in 2003
Robert Duff Senator - State of Connecticut BA, 1993, Sigma Phi Epsilon[2]
Deirdre Quinn actress 1993 BA in Theatre[3]
Percy Wooton former president of the American Medical Association 1953[4]
Jerry Falwell Founder of Liberty University Journalism student before failing out.[5]