North_Carolina_Central_University

North Carolina Central University

North Carolina Central University

Public historically black university in Durham, North Carolina, US


North Carolina Central University (NCCU or NC Central) is a public historically black university in Durham, North Carolina. Founded by James E. Shepard in affiliation with the Chautauqua movement in 1909, it was supported by private funds from both Northern and Southern philanthropists. It was made part of the state system in 1923, when it first received state funding and was renamed as Durham State Normal School. It added graduate classes in arts and sciences and professional schools in law and library science in the late 1930s and 1940s.

Quick Facts Former name, Motto ...

In 1969 the legislature designated this a regional university and renamed it as North Carolina Central University. It has been part of the University of North Carolina system since 1972 and offers programs at the baccalaureate, master's, professional, and doctoral levels. The university is a member of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund.

History

Quick Facts

North Carolina Central University was founded by James E. Shepard as the National Religious Training School and Chautauqua for the Colored Race in the Hayti District. Chautauqua was an educational movement that originated in the Northeast. The school was chartered in 1909 as a private institution and opened on July 5, 1910. Woodrow Wilson, the future U.S. president, contributed some private support for the school's founding.[5]

The school was sold and reorganized in 1915, becoming the National Training School; it was supported by Margaret Olivia Slocum Sage, a philanthropist of New York who was particularly concerned about education. (She founded the Russell Sage Foundation and made generous bequests to several schools.) The National Training School supported Black teacher development in the Jim Crow era, a time when Black education was underfunded by southern states at both the lower and upper levels.

Statue of NCCU founder James E. Shepard. James E. Shepard was also a pharmacist, civil servant and educator. He served as the first president of NCCU for nearly 40 years.

Becoming a state-funded institution in 1923, this school was renamed as Durham State Normal School for Negroes; normal schools trained teachers for elementary grades. In 1925, reflecting the expansion of its programs to a four-year curriculum with a variety of majors, the General Assembly converted the institution into the North Carolina College for Negroes, dedicating it to the offering of liberal arts education and the preparation of teachers and principals of secondary schools. It was the nation's first state-supported liberal arts college for black students.[6] To avoid the state Jim Crow system of segregated passenger cars on trains, Shepard insisted on traveling to Raleigh by car to lobby the legislature.[6] The college's first four-year class graduated in 1929.

The college was accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools as an "A" class institution in 1937 and was admitted to membership in that association in 1957. Graduate courses in the School of Arts and Sciences were added in 1939, in the School of Law in 1940, and in the School of Library Science in 1941. A "race relations conference" was held at the college in July 1944.[7]

In 1947, the General Assembly changed the name of the institution to North Carolina College at Durham. On October 6, 1947, Shepard, the founder and president, died. He was succeeded in 1948 by Alfonso Elder. At the time of Elder's election he was serving as head of the Graduate Department of Education and had formerly been dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. Elder retired September 1, 1963. Samuel P. Massie was appointed as the president on August 9, 1963, and resigned on February 1, 1966. On July 1, 1967, Albert N. Whiting assumed the presidency. He served as president and chancellor of the institution. Among the significant developments during his service was the creation of NCCU School of Business. Programs in public administration and criminal justice were also launched. Whiting retired June 30, 1983.

The 1969 General Assembly designated the institution as one of the State's regional universities, and the name was changed to North Carolina Central University. Since 1972, NCCU has been a constituent institution of the University of North Carolina system. On July 1, 1972, the state's four-year colleges and universities were joined to become The Consolidated University of North Carolina, with 16 individual campuses headed by a single president and governed by the University of North Carolina Board of Governors. However, each campus was led by a separate chancellor and a campus-specific board of trustees.[8]

Whiting was succeeded by LeRoy T. Walker as chancellor, followed by Tyronza R. Richmond, Julius L. Chambers (who had previously been director-counsel (chief executive) of the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund), James H. Ammons, Charlie Nelms, and Debra Saunders-White in 2013. Saunders-White was the first woman to hold the office on a permanent basis (Donna Benson was the first woman to serve as interim chancellor of the university).[9] Saunders-White took a leave of absence in 2016, then provost, Johnson O. Akinleye, was appointed as acting chancellor. Following her death in November 2016, Akinleye became interim chancellor.

Johnson O. Akinleye was elected as the 12th chancellor of NCCU on June 26, 2017.[10] In this position, Akinleye has worked to expand the university's academic partnerships, including new agreements with community colleges, as well as introduced a robust online, distance-education program, NCCU Online. He also created K-12 initiatives and implemented a security strategy to increase safety for campus constituents.

Campus

The campus is located about a mile south of downtown Durham, North Carolina and about three miles east of Duke University. Eleven buildings built before 1940 are included in a national historic district. All of the buildings, except for the three residences, are Georgian Revival-style buildings; they have contemporary fireproof construction with steel trusses and brick exterior walls. They include the James E. Shepard Administration Building, Alexander Dunn Hall, Annie Day Shepard Hall, and five institutional buildings built in the late 1930s under the auspices of the Public Works Administration.[11] The campus was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986.[4]

Organization

NCCU is a part of the University of North Carolina (UNC) System. The campus is governed by a thirteen-member Board of Trustees: eight elected, four appointed, and the president of the Student Government Association also serves as an ex-officio member. The Board elects its officers annually and meets five times per year.[12]

As of Fall 2020, NCCU had a total of 8,078 students, (full and part-time) including 6,067 undergraduate and 1,608 graduate students. Nearly 70% are women and 30% are men. 71.6% percent are Black, 9.7% are white, 6.6% are Hispanic and 1.3 Asian.[13] As of 2020, NCCU had a student faculty ratio of 16:1.[14]

Schools and colleges

  • School of Business (AACSB-accredited)
  • School of Education (CAEB-accredited)
  • School of Law (ABA- and AALS-accredited)
  • School of Library & Information Sciences[15] (ALA-accredited)
  • College of Health & Sciences[16]
  • College of Arts, Social Sciences & Humanities[17]
  • School of Graduate Studies[18]

Research institutes

  • The Julius L. Chambers Biomedical Biotechnology Research Institute (BBRI)
  • Biomanufacturing Research Institute and Technology Enterprise (BRITE)

Additional programs

Student activities

Student organizations

North Carolina Central University has over 130 registered student organizations and 12 honor societies.

Student media

The students of North Carolina Central University publish the Campus Echo, a bi-weekly newspaper that has been in publication since the school's founding in 1910.[20][21] The Campus Echo contains articles covering local events, arts and entertainment, and sports among other topics.

Athletics

NCCU sponsors 14 men's and women's sports teams that participate in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I as a newly readmitted member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. Athletic teams include football, softball, baseball, basketball, track and field, tennis, volleyball, bowling, and golf.

More information Basketball (Men), Football ...

Notable alumni

More information Name, Class year ...

Diedra Solomon is the first female athlete from NC Central University to be invited to tryout for the WNBA Detroit Shock, FA 2000 (Pioneer).

(Omicron Delta Kappa Honors Society) * Member

Diedra Solomon is one of the first All CIAA Tourney Basketball Championship Players from NCCU. She is a part of the first CIAA Tournament Championship Team from (1984), NCCU Eagles, which were featured on BET Television. She was Inducted into the NCCU Athletic Hall of Fame in 1985 by Dr. LeRoy T. Walker. Dr. Walker was the first black president of the USA Olympics Committee and Emeritus Chancellor of NC Central University.


References

  1. "IPEDS-North Carolina Central University".
  2. James Edward Shepard to Woodrow Wilson, October 2, 1909, in Arthur S. Link, ed., The Papers of Woodrow Wilson, Volume 19, pp. 399-400.
  3. Channing, Steven (April 1, 2009). "John Hope Franklin, 1915-2009". Independent Weekly.
  4. "Board of Trustees". Retrieved November 12, 2010.
  5. Platt, Wes (February 8, 2013). "The stars kind of collided". Durham Herald-Sun. Archived from the original on April 15, 2014. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
  6. Claudia Roberts Brown (June 1984). "North Carolina Central University" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory. North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved October 1, 2014.
  7. "About the Board". NCCU. Archived from the original on June 22, 2011. Retrieved November 13, 2010.
  8. "North Carolina Central University". U.S. News & World Report.
  9. "School of Library and Information Sciences". Nccuslis.org. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
  10. "Welcome". Nccu.edu. Archived from the original on January 7, 2011. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
  11. "College of Arts and Sciences". Nccu.edu. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
  12. Echo Staff. "About the Campus Echo". Archived from the original on May 11, 2012. Retrieved August 1, 2012.
  13. Digital NC. "North Carolina Central University Newspapers". digitalnc.org/. Digital NC. Retrieved August 1, 2012.
  14. "Dorothy F. Bailey". Maryland Women's Hall of Fame. Maryland State Archives. Retrieved July 8, 2016.
  15. "Lee Davis Statistics". Sports Reference, LLC. Retrieved March 24, 2009.
  16. "Former Tennessee State basketball coach Harold Hunter dies". The City Paper. March 7, 2013. Archived from the original on November 2, 2013. Retrieved March 30, 2013.
  17. "Crystal Gail Mangum: Profile of the Duke Rape Accuser". www.foxnews.com. Fox News. Retrieved September 24, 2023.

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