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Trinity College of Florida

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(Redirected from Florida Bible Institute) American Bible college This article is about the college in Trinity, Florida. For the similarly named college in Jacksonville, Florida, see Trinity Baptist College.

Trinity College of Florida
Former namesFlorida Bible Institute (1932–1946)
TypePrivate Bible college
Established1932
PresidentSteve Best
LocationTrinity, Florida, United States
ColorsBlack and gold   
AffiliationsUSCAA
MascotTigers
Websitetrinitycollege.edu

Trinity College of Florida is a private interdenominational evangelical Bible college in Trinity, Florida. It was founded in 1932.

History

The institution was founded as Florida Bible Institute in 1932, in Temple Terrace by Dr. William T. Watson, an evangelical tent preacher from North Carolina and pastor of a large Christian and Missionary Alliance church in St. Petersburg. The name was changed to Trinity College of Florida in 1947.

Accreditation

The college was accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of the Association for Biblical Higher Education in 1996 and maintains this accreditation today.

Athletics

Trinity College of Florida's athletic program consists of five sports teams: men's basketball, men's soccer, women's soccer, women's basketball, and women's volleyball. All four participate in the USCAA Division II.

The Trinity College men's basketball program took first place in the Bible College National Invitational Tournament in 2016, 2017, 2020, 2022 and 2024 and the women's basketball team won the Bible College National Invitational in 2018, 2023 and 2024.

On July 19, 2024, Trinity (Fla.) became one of the newest nine member schools to join the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA), effective beginning the 2024–25 school year.

Notable alumni

Notable professors

References

  1. Trinity College of Florida, About, trinitycollege.edu, US, retrieved July 6, 2020
  2. "Accreditation | Trinity College". trinitycollege.edu. Archived from the original on December 21, 2016. Retrieved December 14, 2016.
  3. "Trinity College Athletics | Trinity College". trinitycollege.edu. Archived from the original on December 21, 2016. Retrieved December 14, 2016.
  4. "Men's Basketball | Trinity College". www.trinitycollege.edu. Archived from the original on December 21, 2016. Retrieved December 14, 2016.
  5. USCAA Announces 2024-25 New Members
  6. "Dr. Thomas E. Woodward | Trinity College". www.trinitycollege.edu. Archived from the original on December 21, 2016. Retrieved December 14, 2016.

External links

NCCAA Division II - South
College sports teams in Florida
College athletics
(NCAA Division I)
Bethune–Cookman Wildcats (SWAC)
FIU Panthers (CUSA)
Florida Gators (SEC)
Florida A&M Rattlers (SWAC)
Florida Atlantic Owls (American)
Florida Gulf Coast Eagles (ASUN)
Florida State Seminoles (ACC)
Jacksonville Dolphins (ASUN)
Miami Hurricanes (ACC)
North Florida Ospreys (ASUN)
South Florida Bulls (American)
Stetson Hatters (ASUN/Pioneer)
UCF Knights (Big 12)
College athletics
(NCAA Division II)
Barry Buccaneers (SSC)
Eckerd Tritons (SSC)
Edward Waters Tigers (SIAC)
Embry–Riddle Eagles (SSC)
Flagler Saints (PBC)
Florida Southern Moccasins (SSC)
Florida Tech Panthers (SSC)
Lynn Fighting Knights (SSC)
Nova Southeastern Sharks (SSC)
Palm Beach Atlantic Sailfish (SSC)
Rollins Tars (SSC)
Saint Leo Lions (SSC)
Tampa Spartans (SSC)
West Florida Argonauts (GSC)
College athletics
(NAIA)
Sun Conference
Ave Maria Gyrenes
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Keiser Seahawks
New College Mighty Banyans
St. Thomas University Bobcats
Southeastern Fire
Warner Royals
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Independent
Florida College Falcons
Florida National Conquistadors
College athletics
(NCCAA)
Fort Lauderdale Eagles
Pensacola Christian Eagles
Trinity Baptist Eagles
College athletics
(USCAA)
Atlantis University Atlanteans
Beacon College Blazers
Florida National Conquistadors
Trinity College Tigers
United International Eagle Rays
College athletics
(NJCAA)
ASA College of Miami Avengers (Independent)
Broward College Seahawks (Southern Conference)
Chipola College Indians (Panhandle Conference)
College of Central Florida Patriots (Mid-Florida Conference)
Daytona State College Falcons (Mid-Florida Conference)
Eastern Florida State College Titans (Southern Conference)
Florida SouthWestern State College Buccaneers (Southern Conference)
Florida State College at Jacksonville Blue Wave (Mid-Florida Conference)
Gulf Coast State College Commodores (Panhandle Conference)
Hillsborough Community College Hawks (Suncoast Conference)
Indian River State College Pioneers (Southern Conference)
Lake–Sumter State College Lakehawks (Mid-Florida Conference)
Miami Dade College Sharks (Southern Conference)
Northwest Florida State College Raiders (Panhandle Conference)
Palm Beach State College Panthers (Southern Conference)
Pasco–Hernando State College Conquistadors (Independent)
Pensacola State College Pirates (Panhandle Conference)
Polk State College Eagles (Suncoast Conference)
Santa Fe College Saints (Mid-Florida Conference)
St. Johns River State College Vikings (Mid-Florida Conference)
St. Petersburg College Titans (Suncoast Conference)
State College of Florida, Manatee–Sarasota Manatees (Suncoast Conference)
Tallahassee Community College Eagles (Panhandle Conference)

28°11′41″N 82°40′42″W / 28.194838°N 82.678308°W / 28.194838; -82.678308

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