Madison College was a small college for men, founded in 1851 in Sharon, Mississippi. It ceased operations for financial reasons in 1872.
The establishment of the college was proposed 1850 in a speech given at Sharon Female College by Thomas C. Thornton, then president of the nearby Brandon College in Brandon, Mississippi. He offered to transfer the charter and assets of Brandon College to the town of Sharon on the condition that a building for the new school, to be named Madison College, be provided. Thornton was the first president, as well as "professor of moral and intellectual science and sacred literature." Madison College offered the following degrees: A. B., A. M., D. D., and LL D.
The college suspended operations during the civil war. It reopened after the war but closed in 1872, "perishing for want of endowment and patronage."
Notable faculty and alumni
- Patrick Henry — U. S. Congressman.
References
- ^ Edward Mayes (1899). History Of Education In Mississippi. pp. 60–63. Retrieved 29 July 2012.
- John Howard Brown (30 May 2006). The Cyclopaedia of American Biography: Comprising the Men and Women of the United States Who Have Been Identified with the Growth of the Nation. Kessinger Publishing. p. 21. ISBN 978-1-4254-8625-9. Retrieved 29 July 2012.