![]() |
|
HUSTON-TILLOTSON COLLEGE. Huston-Tillotson College, in Austin, is a coeducational college of liberal arts and sciences, operated jointly under the auspices of the American Missionary Association of the United Church of Christ and the Board of Education of the United Methodist Church. It was formed by merger of Samuel Huston College and Tillotson College,qqv which was effected on October 24, 1952. Huston-Tillotson remained primarily a black college after the merger, although there were no restrictions as to race. The college is accredited or approved by the following bodies: the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, the University Senate of the Methodist Church, the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education, the Association of American Colleges, the National Committee on Accrediting, the Council for Higher Education of the United Church of Christ, the Texas Education Agency,qv and the Association of Texas Colleges.qv The college awards baccalaureate degrees in three divisions: liberal studies, professional studies, and science and technology with major concentration in nineteen areas. In 1966 the twenty-three-acre campus contained an administration building, science building, two residence halls, student union-dining hall, gymnasium-auditorium, music hall, lounge, and two other halls. The Downs-Jones Library housed more than 86,000 volumes in 2001. By the early 1970s new buildings included a classroom-administration building, a chapel, an addition of three wings to the women's dormitory, and an addition of two wings to the men's dormitory. Mary E. Branchqv and William H. Jones, last presidents of Tillotson College, and Karl E. Downs,qv Robert F. Harrington, and Willis J. King,qv past presidents of Samuel Huston College, undertook cooperative sponsorship of several academic activities beginning in 1945. Matthew S. Davageqv served as interim president during the transition period. He retired in 1955 and was succeeded by J. J. Seabrook, the first permanent president of Huston-Tillotson. Upon Seabrook's retirement in 1965, John Q. Taylor King became president; King was president in the 1974-75 term, when the enrollment was 696 students. King retired in 1988, and Joseph T. McMillan, Jr., succeeded him. In the fall of 1998 there were fifty-nine faculty members and 621 students at Huston-Tillotson College. Larry L. Earvin became the fifth president of the college in 2000. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Chrystine I. Shackles, Reminiscences of Huston-Tillotson College (Austin, 1973). Vertical Files, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin.
The Handbook of Texas Online is a project of the Texas State Historical Association (http://www.tshaonline.org).
Copyright ©, The Texas State Historical Association, 1997-2002 |