Misplaced Pages

Blue Mountain Christian University

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Baptish university in Blue Mountain, Mississippi, US For the New Zealand school, see Tapanui. For the unrelated television series, see Blue Mountain State.
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Blue Mountain Christian University" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Blue Mountain Christian University
Former namesBlue Mountain Female Institute (1873–1876)
Blue Mountain Female College (1910–1955)
Blue Mountain College (1955–2022)
TypePrivate college
Established1873
Religious affiliationSouthern Baptist (Mississippi Baptist Convention)
Students450
LocationBlue Mountain, Mississippi, United States
CampusRural
ColorsNavy Blue, Light Blue & Gold
     
NicknameToppers
Sporting affiliationsNAIASSAC
MascotRam
Websitewww.bmc.edu

Blue Mountain Christian University (BMCU), formerly Blue Mountain College, is a private Baptist college in Blue Mountain, Mississippi. Founded as a women's college in 1873, the college's board of trustees voted unanimously for the college to become coeducational in 2005. The university offers baccalaureate degrees as well as graduate programs.

History

Blue Mountain Female College

By 1873, the college was founded as a woman's college by Confederate Brigadier-General Mark Perrin Lowrey, a pastor who was known as "a preacher general" during the war. Blue Mountain Female Institute, as it was called at first, started with 50 students with Lowrey and his two daughters serving as the faculty. In 1877, the college was officially chartered by the State of Mississippi. Lowrey, his sons W. T. and B. G., and grandson Lawrence Lowrey all served as the first four presidents. By 1910, the institution was using the name Blue Mountain Female College.

After the sudden death of President Lowrey in 1960, a longtime professor at the school, Wilfred Tyler, became the first non-Lowrey family president followed by E. Harold Fisher in 1965. Bettye Rogers Coward served as the seventh president from 2001 to 2012. Janice I. Nicholson, a BMC alumna, served as transitional president prior to Barbara Childers McMillin's becoming the eighth president on August 1, 2012.

Originally an independently owned institution, the college was turned over to the Mississippi Baptist Convention in 1920 by the Lowrey Family. It remained focused on women's education until 1956 when a program to train men for church-related vocations was started. In October 2005, the college's board of trustees voted to make the school fully coeducational. On November 4, 2022, the college was renamed Blue Mountain Christian University to distinguish the institution from two-year community colleges and to highlight its Christian identity and mission.

Athletics

The Blue Mountain Christian (BMCU) athletic teams are called the Toppers. The college is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA), primarily competing in the Southern States Athletic Conference (SSAC; formerly known as Georgia–Alabama–Carolina Conference (GACC) until after the 2003–04 school year) since the 2013–14 academic year. The Toppers previously competed in the TranSouth Athletic Conference (TranSouth or TSAC) from 1996–97 to 2012–13.

Men's sports began competition in the 2007–08 academic year, when the school became co-educational.

BMCU competes in 18 intercollegiate sports: Men's sports include baseball, basketball, bowling, cross country, golf, soccer, tennis and track & field; while women's sports include basketball, bowling, cheerleading, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, tennis, track & field and volleyball. Club sports include men's & women's archery, bass fishing and powerlifting.

Notable alumni

References

  1. "The New Albany Meeting of the Miss. Press Association". Vicksburg Evening Post. 25 May 1910. p. 4. Retrieved 3 September 2022.

External links

Southern States Athletic Conference
Full members
Private colleges and universities in Mississippi
List of universities and colleges affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention
Colleges and universities
Seminaries
American women's colleges that became coeducational
Became
coeducational
Coordinate
colleges

34°40′19″N 89°1′45″W / 34.67194°N 89.02917°W / 34.67194; -89.02917

Categories: