1 / 20

History of Valdosta State University

History of Valdosta State University. Presented by Sandi Thurston. The Beginning. Valdosta State University opened in 1913 as a women-only normal college Now VSU offers degrees from Associate to Doctorate Covers more than 41 counties in Georgia and Alabama that includes 31% of the land area

mervin
Télécharger la présentation

History of Valdosta State University

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. History of Valdosta State University Presented by Sandi Thurston

  2. The Beginning • Valdosta State University opened in 1913 as a women-only normal college • Now VSU offers degrees from Associate to Doctorate • Covers more than 41 counties in Georgia and Alabama that includes 31% of the land area • Students attend from 48 states and 50 countries

  3. The History • 1906 – Local legislatures wanted to establish a college named South Georgia Agriculture, Industrial, and Normal College • Colonel W. S. West and other legislators led the way through Georgia senate • 1911- $25,000 in funds were appropriated by Georgia Senate and Valdosta raised another $50,000 • Colonel donated the land where the main part of the campus sits today

  4. 1913 • Richard Holmes Powell declared first president of Valdosta State University • School opens in 1913 and is named South Georgia State Normal College (SGSNC)

  5. First Students • SGSNC students were required to wear an uniform • Students paid $10.00 per year for tuition • They paid an additional $12.00 per month for food and board • However, each student had provide their own fork, knife and spoon

  6. First Students • 1922 SGSNC changed its name to Georgia State Women’s College (GSWC) • There were 402 students enrolled in the education program • An additional 108 enrolled in a pre-education program

  7. Pinecone Annual - 1925 • Pinecone yearbook annual staff - 1925

  8. Activities • Student activities revolved around things women liked • These included: • May Day Festival • May Queen • May Pole Dancing • Old English Christmas feast • Click on the link below to read about the feast May Queen 1925 C:\Documents and Settings\galileo57\Local Settings\Temporary Internet Files\Content.IE5\O5O1YXOR\quee25-l[1].jpg

  9. War and Depression Years • Students helped roll bandages during World War I • During the Depression, the school was ordered to close by the Chancellor • However, the school was turned into a 4-year liberal arts college • Teacher training was deemphasized

  10. Dean Frank Robertson Reade • Dr. Read helped the school to grow from three buildings to seven buildings • The seven buildings include Powell Library, dedicated by Eleanor Roosevelt

  11. 1943 • America now faces another war, therefore Valdosta State University turns its educational emphasis to politics and science • The University added a Bachelor of Science degree

  12. War Effort • During World War II the women of Valdosta State University took a more active role in the war effort • They created projects to aid the war by starting • Scrap metal drives • USO dances • War bond campaigns • Red Cross activities

  13. Pinecone – Science Club - 1943 • These ladies represent the Science Club presidency

  14. Dr. Ralph Thaxton • In 1948, Dr. Thaxton became the next President of Valdosta State University • Declares Valdosta a co-educational school • The name is changed to Valdosta State College • Men arrive on campus

  15. Changes • The arrival of men means the end of women’s functions • The festivals disappear and are replaced with: • Co-ed events • Beauty contests • Christmas festivals • Sports – male oriented • New educational programs are added • Pre-med • Pre-dentistry • Pre-pharmacy

  16. More changes 1963-1966 • 1963 – Valdosta State College peacefully integrates • Dr. S. Walter Martin is named new President of Valdosta State College • The school continues to expand with the addition of: • Odum Library • Find Arts Building • College Union • 6 dormitories

  17. New Buildings • Brown Hall and aerial view of VSU

  18. !978 • Hugh Coleman started the concept to make Valdosta State College a university • Instituted off-campus sites • Initiated Federal grant money

  19. Current History • Ronald M. Zaccari is President of Valdosta State University • Created programs with state and federal funds that make Valdosta State University a 21st century learning institution

  20. Bibliography • Davis, Deborah Skinner. Valdosta State University, The College History Series. Arcadia Publishing, Charleston: 2005, 7-9

More Related