Fort Valley State University

Fort Valley State University
Motto Be Bold. Be Amazing. Be Prepared.
Type Public HBCU
Established 1895
Parent institution
University System of Georgia
Endowment $5,124,791[1]
President Paul Jones
Administrative staff
400
Students 2,227
Undergraduates 2,004
Postgraduates 223
Location Fort Valley, Georgia, United States
Campus 1,365 acres (5.52 km2)
Colors Royal blue and Old gold
         
Nickname Wildcats
Sporting affiliations
NCAA Division IISIAC
Website www.fvsu.edu
Huntington Hall
Patton Hall

Fort Valley State University (FVSU) is a historically black university (HBCU) located in Fort Valley, Georgia. It is a unit of the University System of Georgia and a member-school of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund. Fort Valley is approximately 100 miles (160 km) south of Atlanta, 25 miles (40 km) south of Macon, 18 miles (28 km) west of Warner Robins, and 15 miles (24 km) north of Perry.

As the only 1890 land-grant university in Georgia, Fort Valley State University is a comprehensive institution that provides an education to over 4,000 students. Approximately 91% of the current student body is of African-American descent. The average age of undergraduates is 24 and the average age of graduate students is 33. Roughly one-third of the students live on-campus, and 85 percent of the student body are full-time students. The university is located in the town of Fort Valley in Peach County, the original site of the state's peach industry. Its 1,365-acre (5.52 km2) campus is the second-largest in area for a public university in the state.

History

Fort Valley State University (formerly Fort Valley State College) began with the 1939 consolidation of the Fort Valley High and Industrial School (chartered in 1895) and the State Teachers and Agricultural College of Forsyth (founded in 1902).[2] The Fort Valley High and Industrial School, previously affiliated with the American Church Institute of the Protestant Episcopal Church, was transferred to state control and operation. Under the agreement, the work formerly carried on at the State Teachers and Agricultural College was consolidated with the work at Fort Valley High and Industrial School to form the Fort Valley State College.

In 1947 the state Board of Regents adopted a resolution moving the "land grant" designation from Savannah State College to Fort Valley State College. In response to the Regents' resolution, in 1949 the Georgia General Assembly officially designated the Fort Valley State College as the Land-Grant College for Negroes in Georgia. Public education was segregated at that time.

The school became Fort Valley State University, a state and land-grant university, in June 1996.

Academics

The university offers bachelor's degrees in more than 50 majors, as well as master's degrees in education and counseling. FVSU is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) to award associate, baccalaureate, master's and specialist degrees.

Accredited degree programs include:

The university also offers the Cooperative Developmental Energy Program (CDEP).

Outreach services include Fort Valley State's Cooperative Extension Service Program, where extension service specialists operate in 42 Georgia counties, and the Pettigrew Conference Center, which hosts more than 500 courses and events for 51,000 patrons each year. In an effort to accommodate graduate and non-traditional students, external degree program courses are also being offered at off-campus sites in Macon, Cochran, Warner Robins and Dublin.

A growing list of online courses are offered via WebCT, allowing students to pursue a number of majors, including the English Department's Technical and Professional Writing Degree Program, in the comfort of their own homes.

College of Arts and Sciences

The College of Arts and Sciences, at Fort Valley State University, is the oldest and the largest college at FVSU, housing 12 academic units, offering nearly 80 percent of the courses taught at FVSU, servicing the University System of Georgia’s Academic Core, and providing over 20 undergraduate major fields of study. The Department of Business Administration and Economics is the largest academic department in the College of Arts and Sciences. The School of Business Administration and Economics is an accredited member of the Accreditation Council for Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP).

College of Education

The College of Education is an educator preparation program offering degrees in Middle Grades Education, undergraduate and graduate; Agriculture Education, undergraduate and post-baccalaureate; Early Childhood / Special Education undergraduate; School Counseling; Early Childhood / Special Education graduate; Health and Physical Education; Family and Consumer Sciences Education; and an MAT degree in the secondary teaching areas.

College of Agriculture, Family Sciences and Technology

The College of Agriculture, Home Economics & Allied Programs is ranked 25th nationally in the production of African American agriculturists and the university’s leader in placing first-time applicants into medical, dental, veterinary and pharmacy schools and colleges since 2001. The college has laboratories in the state, and scientists are securing grant funds and conducting cutting-edge research.[3]

Campus

Pettigrew Center

Named in honor of the late former President Dr. C.W. Pettigrew who served from 1973–1980, the C.W. Pettigrew Farm and Community Life Center is a full-service conference, convention, and fine arts facility where events are held by both internal and external sources. This faculty is often used for outreach programs for members of Fort Valley State University and by personnel throughout the region.

Anderson Museum and Welcome Center

The Anderson House is Fort Valley State University's oldest building and houses the Biggs Collection. The Museum and Welcome Center is located on the corner of University Drive and Wright Street, across from Saint Luke Episcopal Church. The center provides an official reception area for visitors to the university.

Anderson House

Anderson House was the residence of F.W. Gano, one of the university’s founders. It is the oldest facility on campus. Fort Valley State University historian Dr. Donnie Bellamey places the building's construction in the late 19th century. This colonial Dutch revival style was a popular architectural design for rural cottages of that era.

The house was renovated in 1918 and served as the family home for principal Henry A. Hunt, President Horace Mann Bond, and President Cornelius V. Troup. It was named in memory of Benjamin S. Anderson, who served as Professor of Agriculture during the institution’s early years.

The main exhibits and displays come from the Biggs Collection of period furnishings, silver, glassware, china, quilts, linens and civil war memorabilia. The majority of the items date from about 1860 to 1900. The English Victorian furniture outfitted the parlor, dining room and bedrooms of an antebellum home in Box Springs, Georgia, which still stands today. The contents of the home were bequeathed by the plantation owner to Mr. Biggs' grandmother, who was a slave. The Smithsonian Institution sought to obtain the quilts and antiques for its permanent anthology of historical collectibles, according to Mr. Biggs. However, he chose to donate the entire collection to Fort Valley State University in 1991.

Student activities

FVSU students have several opportunities for extracurricular involvement at the university, including NCAA Division II intercollegiate athletics, marching band, concert choir, Baptist Student Union Choir, forensics (intercollegiate speech and debate), and cheerleading. There are more than 70 clubs and chapters of major Greek-letter organizations and social organizations on campus.

Student media

FVSU also has a radio station (WFVS-LP 104.3 FM) and a television station (FVSU TV), as well as a college newspaper, The Peachite.[4]

Athletics

Athletic opportunities include intramural sports and intercollegiate men's basketball, cross country, football, tennis, and track and field, and women's basketball, cross country, softball, tennis, volleyball, and track and field. The school currently competes as a member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference.

Facilities

The Health and Physical Education Complex is a 5,100 seat multi-purpose arena and home to the Wildcats basketball teams. It was built in 2004 and has indoor and outdoor courts. The main court has bleacher seating.[5]

Notable athletes

In 1952, Fort Valley alumna Catherine Hardy won a gold medal as a member of the winning 400-meter women’s relay team at the Olympic Games at Helsinki, Finland.

In 1969, the Fort Valley State football team set the modern-era record for most points scored against a college opponent, with 106 points against Knoxville College (October 11, 2011). 11 Wildcats have played in the NFL. In 1995 Tyrone Poole became the first football player from Fort Valley State University to be selected in the first round of the NFL Draft. In 2006 alumnus Rayfield Wright was selected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Notable alumni

Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
Eddie Anderson 1986 Former NFL safety for the Seattle Seahawks and Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders [6]
John W. Blassingame 1960 Professor and Chair of African Studies at Yale University for 29 years
Nick Harper 2001 Former NFL cornerback for the Tennessee Titans and Indianapolis Colts [7]
Marquette King 2012 NFL punter for the Oakland Raiders
Greg Lloyd 1987 Former NFL Pro Bowl player for the Pittsburgh Steelers [8]
Ricardo Lockette Former NFL wide receiver for the Seattle Seahawks, San Francisco 49ers
Tyrone Poole 1995 First round pick by Carolina Panthers; earned two Super Bowl rings with the New England Patriots as starter on the 2003 and 2004 teams
Charles Robinson, Jr. 1970 President and CEO of Sadie G. Mays Health and Rehabilitation Center in Atlanta; first African American to become certified by the American College of Healthcare Administrators
Calvin Smyre 1970 Elected to the Georgia House of Representatives in 1974 as its youngest member at age 26; current Executive Vice President of the $34 billion financial corporation Synovus Foundation
Derrick Wimbush Former NFL player
Rayfield Wright 1967 NFL Hall of Fame inductee [9]
Peppi Zellner Former NFL player
Robert J. Jones 1973 Chancellor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign [10]

Presidents

Presidents of Fort Valley State University
Dr. Horace M. Bond (1939–1945)
Dr. Cornelius V. Troup (1945–1966)
Dr. W. W. E. Blanchet (1966–1973)
Dr. Cleveland W. Pettigrew (1973–1982)
Dr. Luther Burse (1983–1991)
Dr. Oscar L. Prater (1991–2000)
Dr. Kofi Lomotey (2001–2005)
Dr. Larry Rivers (2006–2013)
Dr. Ivelaw Griffith (2013-2014)
Dr. Paul Jones (2015–present)

The President of Fort Valley State University is the chief operating officer of the university. The position is sometimes called the chancellor or rector at other American colleges and universities.

The current president of Fort Valley State University is Dr. Paul Jones, who has held the position since December 2015.

References

  1. "US News College Rankings: Fort Valley State University". US News World Report. Retrieved 6 January 2013.
  2. Fort Valley State University from the New Georgia Encyclopedia Online (2006-03-24)
  3. http://www.fvsu.edu/academics/college_of_agriculture
  4. The Peachite
  5. "The Health and Physical Education Complex-Fort Valley State University". isport.com. Retrieved 6 May 2017.
  6. "Eddie Anderson". databaseFootball.com. databaseSports.com. Retrieved 2013-03-11.
  7. "Nick Harper". databaseFootball.com. databaseSports.com. Retrieved 2008-02-29.
  8. "Greg Lloyd". databaseFootball.com. databaseSports.com. Retrieved 2008-02-29.
  9. "Rayfield Wright". databaseFootball.com. databaseSports.com. Retrieved 2008-02-29.
  10. https://www.uillinois.edu/common/pages/DisplayFile.aspx?itemId=469766

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.