Wesley College, Florence
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wesley College
Established | 1944 |
---|---|
School type | Private College |
President | Lance Sherer |
Location | Florence, Miss. |
Enrollment | 150 |
Faculty | 29 |
Campus | Urban (Small City) |
Nickname | Wesley Warriors |
Athletics | 3 Varsity Sports Club Sports |
Conference | South (NCCAA Division II) |
Homepage | wesleycollege.edu |
Wesley College (also known as Wesley, WC,) is a private coeducational college located in Florence, Mississippi. Founded in 1944.
Wesley is a conservative Bible college in the Wesleyan Arminian tradition. Wesley was founded by the Congregational Methodist Church. Today, it is a rapidly growing institution with a diverse student body representing over eighteen different denominations.
Wesley offers programs of study in 3 academic divisions leading to Bachelor's degrees, and program certificates. Academic programs available at Wesley include bachelor's programs in Biblical Literature, Christian Education, Missions, Pastoral Ministries, Christian Counseling, and certificate programs in General Education, and Ministerial Studies.
Wesley College is accredited by the ABHE.
As of fall 2006, Wesley College has an enrollment of more than 150 students and its president is Mr. Lance Sherer.
Contents |
[edit] History
In 1905, the Congregational Methodist Church founded its first college, "Atlanta Bible College."
In 1912, financial difficulties and internal problems forced the closing of the college.
In 1944 the college was reborn as "Dallas Bible School" with Otho Jennings named the first Superintendent. In August of the same year, W.E. Bruce was tabbed to replace Jennings, and would hold the position until 1953.
In 1953 the Congregational Methodist Church acquired Westminster College in Tehuacana, Texas, from the Methodist Protestant Church, and relocated the school there, adopting the name.
In 1972, property was acquired in Florence Mississippi and the college was relocated to newly constructed facilities. In 1976 the name was changed from Westminster College to Wesley College, which it maintains today.
The college has had many ups and downs through its modern history. With the election of a Wesley College graduate as President of general conference of the Congregational Methodist Church in 2002, there has been renewed interest in moving the college forward. In 2004, Lance Sherer was hired as president of the college and began to rapidly move Wesley toward an institution-wide shared vision of providing services to men and women within the framework of a Christ-centered educational program. This vision sees Wesley as a growing institution offering a Christian education that is relevant in all areas of life.
Wesley specializes in preparing students for ministerial work, seminary studies, post-graduate studies, and core courses in a Christian environment that are widely accepted at other institutions for transfer. Students often take their core courses to other colleges and universities where they complete their degrees in fields not offered at Wesley, and Wesley students have gone on to receive post-graduate educations at Universities as prestigious as Yale.
[edit] Campus
Wesley is composed of a singular campus of approximately 40 acres. There are five buildings including the main academic building, men's and women's dormitories, the gymnasium (home to the Wesley Warriors of the NCCAA), and the College library which is housed in the Congregational Methodist Headquarters building.
The center of the campus is marked by a quadrangle where students are routinely seen studying or lounging, and a large gazebo. Wireless internet is available all over campus.
[edit] Athletics
Wesley's athletic teams are known as the Wesley Warriors. The school fields a varsity basketball team in the NCCAA's Division II and is a member of the competitive South Region, and intermural sports are currently being developed with the long term goal of fielding competitive teams.
[edit] Men's basketball
Historically, Wesley has had a competitive program, winning a national title in the late 1990's under then Head Coach and current Athletics Director William "Junior" Devore. Extraneous issues led to the program being dismantled a short time later. Wesley's men's basketball program was resurrected in 2003 after a period of several years inactivity, and now plays in a larger division and at a higher level than ever before. Head coach Josh Sherer now has the Warriors fielding a winning program that is not only competitive in the NCCAA, but is able to play competitively against teams from the NAIA and NCAA. In 2005, the fledgeling NCCAA program attained a top five ranking. In the fall of 2006, Wesley posted historic first time victories over NAIA Belhaven College, Tougaloo College, and NCAA Division III top 25 ranked Mississippi College. The Wesley Warriors were ranked #1 in NCCAA division two for most of the 2006/2007 season, and entered the national tournament as the #1 seed, losing to the eventual national champion in the semifinals.
[edit] Women's Athletics
Beginning in the fall semester of 2006, Wesley introduced a women's volleyball team.