Morristown College
Encyclopedia
Morristown College, located in Morristown, Tennessee
Morristown, Tennessee
Morristown is a city in, and the county seat of, Hamblen County, Tennessee, United States. The population was 29,137 at the 2010 United States Census. It is the principal city of the Morristown, Tennessee Metropolitan Statistical Area, which encompasses all of Grainger, Hamblen and Jefferson counties...

 was founded in 1881 by the national Freedman's Aid Society
Freedman's Aid Society
The Freedmen’s Aid Society was founded in 1861 during the American Civil War by the American Missionary Association , a group supported chiefly by the Congregational, Presbyterian and Methodist churches in the North. It organized a supply of teachers from the North and provided housing for them,...

 of the Methodist Episcopal Church
Methodist Episcopal Church
The Methodist Episcopal Church, sometimes referred to as the M.E. Church, was a development of the first expression of Methodism in the United States. It officially began at the Baltimore Christmas Conference in 1784, with Francis Asbury and Thomas Coke as the first bishops. Through a series of...

. The school was renamed Knoxville College-Morristown in 1989 and closed in 1994.

The 52 acres (210,436.7 m²) campus is perched on a hill in the middle of Morristown and is surrounded by five distinct neighborhoods. Seven of the college's nine buildings are on the National Register of Historic Places
National Register of Historic Places
The National Register of Historic Places is the United States government's official list of districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects deemed worthy of preservation...

. Most of the college buildings have fallen into disrepair, with broken windows and deteriorating facades. One building was burned in 2008, due to arson. A second building burned in October 2010, cause unknown.

In 1881, the Methodist Episcopal Church founded Morristown College, a historically African American two-year institution of higher education, located in Morristown, the seat of Hamblen County, Tennessee. Prior to the civil rights movement, the college held the distinction of being one of only two institutions in East Tennessee for African Americans, the other being Knox College, founded in 1875. Although Morristown College was officially founded in 1881, Almyra H. Stearns, a New Jersey missionary, planted the seed for the school twelve years earlier when she moved south to start a small Freedman’s Bureau grammar school for recently emancipated blacks in the same general area where the later college stood. By 1881, the Methodist Episcopal Church decided to expand Stearns’s school into a seminary and normal school to supply ministers for black Methodist congregations and teachers for black schools.

The church appointed Judson S. Hill, a twenty-seven-year-old pastor and missionary from Trenton, New Jersey, to be the first president. Under Hill’s leadership, the college grew to over three hundred students by the turn of the century. To raise money for needed classroom buildings and dormitories, Hill secured funds from northern philanthropists such as Andrew Carnegie, the McCormicks of Chicago, and the Kelloggs of Battle Creek, Michigan. In addition, Hill solicited contributions from local merchants. Through his successes in fundraising, Hill was able to launch a major expansion and building program for the college that included the construction of dormitories, classrooms, administrative offices, and a dining facility. The school also acquired a three-hundred-acre dairy farm.

Hill’s improvements at Morristown College occurred within the larger context of the Jim Crow South. Most whites saw little need for African American education, especially higher education. Many northern and southern leaders, and even some black educators such as Booker T. Washington, tried to compromise with the white society by channeling African Americans into industrial and vocational education. Following this trend, Hill introduced industrial training and, by 1901, the college was renamed Morristown Normal and Industrial College. Some of the industrial courses offered for male students included woodworking, brick making and masonry, carpentry, iron molding, shoemaking, broom manufacturing, and agricultural training. For the females, domestic science classes included sewing, cooking, and serving techniques. The products created in these classes, such as brooms, were sold across the United States, and the profits were then given back to the college. For the remainder of Hill’s presidency, industrial education was the central focus of the Morristown curriculum, decreasing the earlier emphasis on teacher and clergy training.

Hill’s death in 1931, coupled with the onset of the Great Depression, brought dramatic changes to the college. After two years of searching, the Board of Schools of the Methodist Church selected Edward C. Paustin as the new president. During his three-year tenure, Paustin changed the direction of the school from industrial training to a more traditional liberal arts education. It is likely that the expense of maintaining the shops during a time of economic crisis drove some of these policies. Despite his efforts, Paustin was unable to turn the school around financially and he resigned in 1937. J. W. Haywood, Morristown’s first black president, succeeded Paustin and managed the college for seven years.

In 1944, Miller W. Boyd became the first Morristown College alumnus to become president of the institution. He sought funding for the school by establishing relationships with Morristown’s business community and instituting financial support from alumni. Through his efforts, enrollment rose to 435, the largest in the school’s history, and the college’s finances improved. In the fall of 1952, Boyd died and his wife, Mary Whitten, served as interim president for the remainder of the year. H. L. Dickason succeeded Whitten in 1953.

After the civil rights movement of the 1960s, African Americans were able to attend previously all-white, state-supported colleges and universities. As a result, Morristown College found it increasingly difficult to compete with the larger public institutions that could offer cheaper tuition and received state and federal funds. Over the next twenty years, the college continued to struggle financially. In 1989, Knoxville College acquired Morristown and began operating it as a junior college. But Knoxville College also had its challenges, and it closed the Morristown College in the mid-1990s.

The historic campus of Morristown College is listed in the National Register of Historic Places for its architectural significance and its important contributions to black education. Its significant architectural examples included Queen Anne and Georgian Revival styles. But the campus has been neglected, threatening the existence of these historic buildings.

Kevin Cason, Middle Tennessee State University

2010
Renaissance holdings & development Inc
Has purchased the property and has moved forward to develop the campus into
The National Center for energy & Sustainability a company focused on education research and development of energy products .
Generation greenUSA inc uses Biomass
Biomass
Biomass, as a renewable energy source, is biological material from living, or recently living organisms. As an energy source, biomass can either be used directly, or converted into other energy products such as biofuel....

, Alternative energy
Alternative energy
Alternative energy is an umbrella term that refers to any source of usable energy intended to replace fuel sources without the undesired consequences of the replaced fuels....

, sustainable energy
Sustainable energy
Sustainable energy is the provision of energy that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs. Sustainable energy sources include all renewable energy sources, such as hydroelectricity, solar energy, wind energy, wave power, geothermal...

 working with TVA
TVA
-Organizations:*Tennessee Valley Authority*Toronto Vegetarian Association*Tibetan Volunteers for Animals*TVA Media, a media corporation operating out of Littleton, Colorado formerly called The Valley Authority.*Tidewater Volleyball Association-Television:...

.

Founders and public figures Kyle D Adkins, Wilbur F Hawkins, Ernest Brooks
Sources
City of Morristown Tennessee
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