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Early Beginnings: 1835–1919
The University of West Alabama was chartered in 1835 as Livingston Female Academy and State Normal College, a church-related female academy, and admitted its first students in 1839. After difficult times during the Civil War and Reconstruction periods, the school reopened in the late 1860s or early 1870s. Although it appears that a few male students were admitted following the reopening, a resolution by the board of trustees in 1876 excluded boys, and this policy was followed until the beginning of the 20th century. Livingston Female Academy and State Normal College continued as a women's college with some State support until 1907, when the State assumed full control. It remained under its own board of trustees, however, until the Alabama Legislature created a State Board of Trustees for all the normal schools in 1911. In 1919 this board was abolished and all state normal schools were placed under the supervision of the State Board of Education. During these early years the school offered both secondary education and normal school programs for the training of teachers.
Depression Era: 1920–1956
In 1929 the school at Livingston became State Teachers College, Livingston, Alabama, with authority to confer the degree of Bachelor of Science. The Bachelor of Arts degree was authorized in 1947. Although the institution had begun accepting male students soon after 1900, the student body remained predominantly female through the 1950s.
Name Changes: 1957–1994
In 1957 the name was again changed by an act of Legislature — this time to Livingston State College — and the following year the mission of the institution was broadened when the Graduate Division was established and the College was authorized to confer master's degrees in the field of professional education. In 1967 an act of the Legislature created Livingston University, with its own board of trustees. In 1971 a longtime historic landmark in Sumter County, the Alamuchee-Bellamy Covered Bridge (built 1861), was restored and moved on campus by the Sumter County Historical Society. It currently spans the northeast corner of Duck Pond behind Reed Hall.
Present Day: 1995 – Present
In 1995 the institution recognized its broader mission as a regional university serving the educational needs of all the citizens of the area by changing its name to The University of West Alabama. Dating back to 2002, a record enrollment has been reached for five consecutive years at the university. In the fall of 2005, enrollment reached the 3,000 mark for the first time and went on to reach the 4,000 mark in the fall of 2007. More information about the university enrollment can be found at http://www.uwa.edu/about/universityoverview/quickfacts/quickenrollmentfacts
Presidents
Presidents of The University of West Alabama http://admissions.uwa.edu/history.asp | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Person | Years | Person | Years | ||
Dr. Carlos SmithHead of Institution | 1870–1881 | Julia TutwilerPresident | 1881–1910 | ||
Dr. George William BrockPresident | 1910–1936 | Dr. Noble Franklin GreenhillPresident | 1936–1944 | ||
Dr. William Wilson HillPresident | 1944–1954 | Dr. Delos Poe CulpPresident | 1954–1963 | ||
Dr. John E. DeloneyPresident | 1963–1972 | Dr. Ralph M. LyonActing President | 1972–1973 | ||
Dr. Asa N. GreenPresident | 1973–1993 | Dr. James Bob DrakeInterim President | 1993–1994 | ||
Dr. Don C. HinesPresident | 1994–1998 | Dr. Ed RoachPresident | 1998–2002 | ||
Dr. Richard Holland President | 2002–2014 | Mr. John Blackwell President | 2014 | ||
Dr. Ken Tucker President | 2015–present |
NOTE: Dr. Holland is the first UWA graduate to serve as the president of the University.
Previously, he was the Dean of the College of Natural Sciences and Mathematics.