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Southern States Conference

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Not to be confused with Southern States Athletic Conference.
Southern States Conference
Formerly
  • Alabama Intercollegiate Conference (1938–1959)
  • Alabama Collegiate Conference (1959–1972)
  • Southern States Conference (1972–1997)
ConferenceNAIA
Founded1938
Ceased1997
CommissionerLarry Maples (since 1996)
HeadquartersMarion, Alabama
RegionSouthern United States
Locations
Location of teams in {{{title}}}

The Southern States Conference (SSC) was an affiliate of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics that included member institutions in the U.S. states of Alabama, Georgia, Mississippi, and Florida. The league existed from 1938 to 1997.

History

The league was established in December 1938 as the Alabama Intercollegiate Conference (AIC), comprising schools from just that state. The six charter members were: Jacksonville State Teachers College, Saint Bernard College, Troy State Teachers College, Snead Junior College, Livingston State Teachers College, and Marion Military Institute. The league ceased operations in 1942 because of World War II and because several member schools dropped their intercollegiate athletics programs. The AIC was reformed again in January 1948 after a five year lapse. In 1959 it was renamed the Alabama Collegiate Conference (ACC), and then in May 1972, the league was rebranded as Southern States Conference.

At the conclusion of the 1994–95 school year, two schools left the SSC, causing league membership to dip below the six required to have an NAIA championship in every sport except basketball. The SSC then existed in 1995–96 as a basketball-only conference. It returned to an all-sports conference for 1996–97 before dissolving.

Members

Institution Location Founded Nickname Joined Left Current
conference
Ref.
Alabama Christian College /
Faulkner University
Montgomery, Alabama 1942 Eagles 1981 1997 Southern States Athletic
Alabama College /
University of Montevallo
Montevallo, Alabama 1896 Falcons 1960 1995 Gulf South
University of Alabama in Huntsville Huntsville, Alabama 1950 Chargers 1973 1993 Gulf South
Athens College Athens, Alabama 1822 Bears 1948 1997 N/A
Auburn University at Montgomery Montgomery, Alabama 1967 Warhawks 1975 1997 Gulf South
Belhaven College Jackson, Mississippi 1883 Blazers 1974 1981 Collegiate Conference of the South
Birmingham–Southern College Birmingham, Alabama 1856 Panthers 1977 1996 Southern Athletic Association
Columbus College Columbus, Georgia 1958 Cougars 1972 1973 Peach Belt
Eldridge Baptist Academy /
Eldridge Junior College
Eldridge, Alabama 1890 1939 1940 N/A
Florence State Teachers College /
University of North Alabama
Florence, Alabama 1830 Lions 1949 1971 ASUN
Huntingdon College Montgomery, Alabama 1854 Hawks 1960 1995 Collegiate Conference of the South
Jacksonville State Teachers College /
Jacksonville State College /
Jacksonville State University
Jacksonville, Alabama 1883 Gamecocks 1938 1970 Conference USA
Life College Marietta, Georgia 1974 Running Eagles 1996 1997 Southern States Athletic
Livingston State Teachers College /
Livingston State College
Livingston, Alabama 1835 Tigers 1938 1970 Gulf South
Marion Military Institute Marion, Alabama 1842 Tigers 1938 1956 ACCC
Saint Bernard College /
Southern Benedictine College
Cullman, Alabama 1929 Saints 1938 1979 N/A
Selma University Selma, Alabama 1878 Bulldogs 1997 N/A
Snead State Junior College Boaz, Alabama 1898 Parsons 1938 1956 ACCC
Southern Union Junior College Wadley, Alabama 1922 Bison 1940 1956 ACCC
Spring Hill College Mobile, Alabama 1830 Badgers 1942 1981 SIAC
Talladega College Talladega, Alabama 1867 Tornadoes c. 1982 1997 Continental Athletic Conference
Thomas College Thomasville, Georgia 1950 Night Hawks 1996 1997 Southern States Athletic
Troy State Teachers College /
Troy State College /
Troy State University
Troy, Alabama 1887 Trojans 1938 1972 Sun Belt
William Carey College Hattiesburg, Mississippi 1892 Crusaders 1972 1981 Southern States Athletic
University of West Florida Pensacola, Florida 1963 Argonauts 1975 1994 Gulf South

Champions

Football

References

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  2. ^ Sims, Kelvin (October 23, 1996). "Alabama–Huntsville harvests Duncan, Jones". Montgomery Advertiser. Montgomery, Alabama. p. 39. Retrieved December 30, 2021 – via Newspapers.com.
  3. Key, Raiford (December 15, 1938). "Member Of New A. I. Conference". The Troy Messenger. Troy, Alabama. p. 6. Retrieved November 14, 2022 – via Newspapers.com Open access icon.
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