Union University
35°40′59″N 88°51′23″W / 35.6830°N 88.8565°W
Official crest of Union University (Trademark of Union University) | |
Motto | Religio et Eruditio |
---|---|
Type | Private |
Established | 1823 |
Affiliation | Tennessee Baptist Convention |
Academic staff | 227 |
Students | 4,186 |
Location | |
Campus | Urban, 290 acres (1.2 km2) |
Nickname | Bulldogs |
Colors | Cardinal & Cream |
Website | www.uu.edu |
Union University is a private, evangelical Christian, liberal arts university located in Jackson, Tennessee, with additional campuses in Germantown, Tennessee, and Hendersonville, Tennessee. The university is affiliated with the Tennessee Baptist Convention and relates to the Southern Baptist Convention.
Union is one of the top tier institutions in the South, listed for each of the past eleven years by U.S. News and World Report, and is notable for having trained a United States Supreme Court justice, and in the sports world as the place where Bear Bryant began his football coaching career.[1]
In 2008, U.S. News ranked Union in the top 10 in five subcategories and 20th of 574 in the "Southern Universities-Master's: Top Schools" category. It has been recognized by Peterson's Competitive College Guide, the Time/Princeton Review, and Templeton's Colleges that Encourage Character Development. Union is a recipient of the President's Higher Education Community Service Award and has been listed as one of America's Top 100 College Buys.
Union University is the heir of some of the oldest universities in the country The school is a union of several different schools: West Tennessee College formerly known as Jackson Male Academy, Union University of Murfreesboro, Southwestern Baptist University, and Hall-Moody Junior College of Martin, Tennessee.[2]
Union University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). Union University is a member of the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities (CCCU).[3]
Rankings
Union University has ranked as one of the South’s top tier universities for the 11th straight year by U.S.News & World Report.
Union also ranked in 16 subcategories:
- 3rd in “faculty resources” category (includes classes with fewer than 20 students, faculty salary and the proportion of professors with the highest degree in the field).
- 4th in the “percent of classes with fewer than 20 students” category - 73%.
- 4th (tied) for SAT/ACT score category.
- 5th (tied) for the “student/faculty ratio” category (ratio of 12/1), placing Union in the top 18 southern universities in this category.
- 7th (tied) in “selectivity rank,” which includes test scores and class rank for incoming students.
- 9th (tied) for “freshmen in top 25 percent of high school class"; 66 percent of freshmen meet that description.
Union is also recognized in:
- Peterson's Guide to Competitive Colleges;
- The Templeton Foundation Guide for Colleges That Encourage Chartacter Development;
- America's Best College Buys and
- America's Best College Scholarships.[4]
History
Early History
Jackson Male Academy was founded in 1823 just after West Tennessee was opened for settlement.[5] Only five years earlier in 1818 was the land purchased from the Chickasaw Indians.
In 1907, Dr. T. T. Eaton, a trustee of Southwestern Baptist University, left his 6,000 volume library to the college. Eaton was a former professor of Union University at Murfreesboro, where his father, Dr. Joseph H. Eaton, was a former president.
Southwestern soon changed its name to Union University in honor of the Eatons and others from Union at Murfreesboro who had impacted Southwestern as faculty, administrators, trustees, and contributors.
In 1925 the Tennessee Baptist Convention secured a charter that vested the rights, authority, and property of Union University in the Tennessee Convention. This charter included the election of the University’s trustees. Two years later, the Convention consolidated Hall-Moody Junior College at Martin (1900–1927) with Union University.
In 1948 the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools granted Union University accreditation.
In 1962 Union developed a nursing program with the assistance of Jackson-Madison County General Hospital at the request of local physicians.
In 1975 Union moved from downtown Jackson, Tennessee, to a new campus located near the Highway 45-Bypass in north Jackson.
The Craig and Barefoot Administrations
During President Robert Craig (1967–85) and President Hyran Barefoot's (1987–1996) administrations:
- enrollment increased from fewer than 1,000 students to more than 2,000;
- the Penick Academic Complex was enlarged several times;
- additional housing units were erected;
- and the Blasingame Academic Complex (1986) and the Hyran E. Barefoot Student Union Building (1994) were constructed.
From the early 1950s to the early 1970s, Union operated an Extension Center in the Memphis area. From 1987-95, Union offered the degree-completion program leading to the Bachelor of Science in Nursing (RN to BSN track) in Memphis. At that time there were over 300 graduates of this program.
David S. Dockery's Administration
David S. Dockery was elected as the fifteenth president of Union University in December 1995. Dockery brought a desire to take Union to a regional and national prominence in Christian higher education. Thus far he has realized:
- headcount increase from 2200 (in 1996) to more than 3500 (in 2004);
- increased giving to Union, including ten of the largest commitments in Union history;
- construction of two residence halls, Miller Tower, Jennings Hall, Hammons Hall, Fesmire Field House and the new White Hall science building;
- successful completion of the $60 million comprehensive “Building a Future” campaign (1998–2005) (now at $69 million);
- renewed commitment to scholarship and research among Union faculty-part of Union's new Center for Faculty Development;
- new undergraduate majors in political science, physics, theology, digital media studies, church history, ethics, sports management, sports medicine, engineering; and graduate programs in education (M.Ed., Ed.S., and Ed.D.), nursing (MSN with tracks in education, administration, and nurse anesthesia), and intercultural studies (MAIS);
- SACS Level V accreditation was achieved;
- added programs in undergraduate research;
- Addition of LIFE group programs, student retention programs, student mission involvement, giftedness assessment program for freshman students;
- the establishment of an extension campus in Germantown, TN, which now has almost 700 students;
- the establishment of the Carl F.H. Henry Center for Christian Leadership;
- the establishment of the Charles Colson Chair for Faith and Culture;
- the establishment of the annual Scholarship Banquet (1997–2004);
- achieving top tier recognition in U.S. News and World Report and other important listings.
- Implemented the $110 million "Union 2010" plan that includes the future addition of new tennis courts, new intramural fields, and an amphitheatre, which has already included the completion of a second soccer field,the Fesmire Fieldhouse, and the state-of-the-art science building, White Hall.[6]
- a Doctor of Pharmacy program.[7]
The Storm - February 5, 2008
On February 5, 2008, at 7:02 p.m.the university was struck by an EF4 tornado, with winds between 166–200 miles per hour. The tornado destroyed eighteen dormitory buildings and caused over $40 million dollars worth of damage to the campus, which suffered a direct hit rendering almost 80% unlivable. None of the approximately 1,800 students on campus at the time were killed. David Dockery, the president of the University, said:
I'm convinced-nobody will ever convince me otherwise-that God's angels were unleashed to come as minstering spirits to protect those students in the most precarious of situations.
51 students were taken to Jackson-Madison General Hospital. While most students were released after being treated, nine were kept overnight. Some students were trapped for hours while emergency crews worked to rescue them. A total of 31 buildings received damage of varying degrees.[8] The devastation captured nationwide attention and was featured by CNN, Fox News,[9] the New York Times [10] and numerous regional news outlets. Secretary of Homeland Security, Michael Chertoff, FEMA Director, R. David Paulison and Governor Phil Bredesen all visited the campus after the disaster.[11]
The Commercial Appeal reported that due to extensive damage, the campus would not reopen until February 18.[12] Lambuth University, a rival area university, reportedly offered to open its dormitories to displaced Union students. The congregation of Englewood Baptist Church, which owns the Old English Inn in Jackson, voted unanimously to open the Inn to Union students. The church's move will accommodate almost three hundred students until December 2008. The University also expected that around 200 students would be housed in the private homes of Union faculty, staff and friends.
It was the second time in just over 5 years that the campus was hit by a tornado. On the evening of November 10, 2002, during the Veterans Day Weekend tornado outbreak, the school was struck by an F1 tornado, with winds of approximately 100 miles per hour, which did approximately 2 million dollars worth of damage to the school. There were no serious injuries.[13] Union president David Dockery stated that the February 5, 2008 tornado was about fifteen times as bad at the 2002 tornado. The damage caused by the February 5th tornado was estimated at $40 million.[14]
Presidents
President | Tenure | Institution | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Dr. Joseph H. Eaton | 1848–1859 | Union University (Murfreesboro) |
2 | James Madison Pendleton | – | Union University (Murfreesboro) |
3 | Charles Manley | – | Union University (Murfreesboro) |
4 | John W. Conger | 1907–1909 | Union University (Jackson) |
5 | Isaac B. Tigrett | 1909–1911 | Union University (Jackson) |
6 | Robert A. Kimbrough | 1911–1913 | Union University (Jackson) |
7 | Richard M. Inlow | June 1913–December 1913 | Union University (Jackson) |
8 | Albert T. Barrett | 1913–1915 | Union University (Jackson) |
9 | George M. Savage | 1915–1918 | Union University (Jackson) |
10 | Henry Eugene Watters | 1918–1931 | Union University (Jackson) |
11 | John Jeter Hurt | 1931–1945 | Union University (Jackson) |
12 | Warren F. Jones | 1945–1963 | Union University (Jackson) |
13 | Francis E. Wright | 1963–1967 | Union University (Jackson) |
14 | Robert E. Craig | 1967–1986 | Union University (Jackson) |
15 | Hyran E. Barefoot | 1986–1996 | Union University (Jackson) |
16 | David S. Dockery | 1996–present | Union University (Jackson) |
Campus
Jackson facilities
The campus is 290 acres (1.2 km2) and includes a 2,200-seat gymnasium, dormitories for men and women including a married housing complex, separate lodges for the fraternities and sororities, academic halls, an administration center, baseball and softball parks, two soccer fields, an indoor swimming pool, and wellness center.[15]
Germantown facilities
Union also has a 35-acre (140,000 m2) campus in Germantown, Tennessee, (suburban Memphis) offering graduate degrees in business, education, Christian studies & nursing. The degrees in education include the M.Ed., M.A.Ed., Ed.S., and Ed.D.[16]
Hendersonville facilities
Union's newest location is in Hendersonville, Tennessee, a suburb of Nashville, TN. This campus offers graduate degrees in education and Christian studies.[17]
Olford Ministries International
In early 2007, it was announced that Olford Ministries would be merged into Union University. Olford is an institution that focuses on pastors' training and theological courses. The Olford campus is a 25-acre (100,000 m2), wooded retreat setting in Memphis, Tennessee.[18]
Housing
In Jackson, Union has apartment-style living. Each student has a separate private bedroom that shares a common living space with three roommates. All apartments feature a high-speed Internet connection, as well as kitchen unit. Some apartments feature private phone lines or a washer and dryer. All private living spaces have a window and the common areas have cable TV access. There is no student housing at the Germantown campus. Temporary off campus housing was at The Jett (the former Old English Inn) for the majority of the spring 2008 semester.[19]
Sports
The school sponsors intercollegiate sports teams that participate in the NAIA's TranSouth Athletic Conference. Its men's sports are soccer, cross country, basketball, baseball, and golf. Its women's sports are soccer, volleyball, cross country, basketball, softball, and cheerleading.
The women's basketball team won national championships during the 1998, 2005, 2006, 2009, and 2010 seasons.
The men's soccer team won an NCCAA National Championship in 2003.[20]
Greek system
There are six social fraternities on campus, two music fraternities and numerous academic fraternities.
Each of these groups is relatively large in size relative to the size of the institution and consistently contributes to philanthropies, both regionally and globally. The number of members in the social fraternities can range between 50 to 80 members per chapter.
The fraternities and sororities are an active presence on campus through philanthropy, intramural sports and Greek Olympics.[21]
Fraternities
The fraternities represented on campus are:
Fraternity | Chapter | Chartered locally |
---|---|---|
Alpha Tau Omega | Tennessee Beta Tau | February 28, 1894 |
Lambda Chi Alpha | Lambda-Zeta Zeta | December 5, 1964 |
Sigma Alpha Epsilon | Tennessee Eta | July 4, 1857 |
Sororities
The sororities represented on campus are:
Sorority | Chapter | Chartered locally |
---|---|---|
Chi Omega | Upsilon | 1904 |
Kappa Delta | Zeta Beta | February 10, 1990 |
Zeta Tau Alpha | Beta Omega | December 11, 1935 |
Academic
The academic fraternities are:
Fraternity | Discipline |
---|---|
Alpha Psi Omega | Theater |
Phi Alpha Theta | History |
Phi Beta Lambda | Business |
Pi Gamma Mu | Social Sciences
Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia Music |
Sigma Tau Delta | English |
Publications
- The Cardinal and Cream is the campus newspaper
- The Torch is the English Department's award winning literary and arts publication
Guest Lecture Events
Annual Scholarship Banquet
Union's Scholarship Banquet has brought prominent national and international figures to Union including: former president George H.W. Bush, former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, former Secretary of State Colin Powell, former Russian president and Nobel Prize winner Mikhail Gorbachev, former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, former Senator Bob Dole, presidential candidate Rudy Giuliani, former British Prime Minister John Major and Winston S. Churchill, Grandson of the former British Prime Minister.[22]
The Union Forum
Union's Forum is an annual speaker series that has brought several national figures to Union, including Peggy Wehmeyer, William Kristol, Michael Medved, Robert Novak, Stephen Carter, Morton Kondracke, Clarence Page, Juan Williams, and Margaret Carlson.[23]
Notable people
Alumni
- Dr. Bob Agee, Executive Director for the International Association of Baptist Colleges and Universities, and President Emeritus, Oklahoma Baptist University.
- Milton Brown (politician) (W) - U.S. Representative and co-founder of Southwestern University (now Union University) and Lambuth University both located in Jackson, Tennessee.
- John Dancy - Former NBC News Correspondent.
- Dr. Monroe E. Dodd -- Pastor of First Baptist Church of Shreveport, Louisiana, 1912–1950; founder of Dodd College for Girls; and radio minister.
- Dr. Joshua F. Drake - Musicologist and hymnist at Grove City College in Grove City, Pennsylvania.
- Dr. Steve Gaines - Pastor of Bellevue Baptist Church in Memphis, Tennessee.
- Pauline LaFon Gore - mother of United States Vice President Albert Gore, attended Union and was awarded an honorary degree.
- Dr. George H. Guthrie - Benjamin W. Perry Professor of Bible and chair of the School of Christian Studies , Union University; one of the English Standard Version (ESV) Bible Translation Review Scholars. An expert in Greek Exegesis and writer known for his analysis and expertise on the Epistle to the Hebrews.
- Eli Shelby Hammond - federal judge
- John W. Holland - federal judge
- Howell Edmunds Jackson - United States Supreme Court Justice
- William Hicks Jackson - Confederate general, brother of Justice Howell Edmonds Jackson
- J. Thomas McAfee - president of Hallmark Systems, Inc. in Atlanta, Georgia.
- Charles N. Millican - founding President for the University of Central Florida.
- Gaylon Moore - professional basketball player.
- Jimmy Moore (baseball) - Major League baseball player.
- W. Winfred Moore -- Pastor of First Baptist Church of Amarillo, Texas (1959–1989); professor at Baylor University
- Tom J. Murray (D) - U.S. Representative from Tennessee from 1943 to 1966.
- David Alexander Nunn - U.S. Representative and Tennessee Secretary of State
- Luis Ortiz (baseball) - Major League baseball player.
- Josephine Owino - basketball player for the Washington Mystics
- Joseph B. Palmer - Confederate general and lawyer
- Herron C. Pearson (D) - U.S. Representative from Tennessee.
- Chris Rice - Christian recording artist
- Scratch Track - Indie Acoustic Hip-hop Band
- Dr. L. Thomas Strong III - Dean of Leavell College and Professor of New Testament and Greek in Leavell College at the New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary.
- John May Taylor (D) - U.S. Representative from Tennessee.
- Joshua Trent - Associate Director of the Office of Refugee Resettlement, Administration for Children and Families at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Fellow at the C. S. Lewis Institute, and 2006 Lincoln Fellow of the Claremont Institute.
- Dr. William E. Troutt - President, Rhodes College
- Dr. Timothy Tucker - Former President of the American Pharmacists Association (APhA). Former president of the Tennessee Pharmacists Association (TPA), president of the Tennessee Board of Pharmacy, and Speaker of the House for TPA for more than 10 years. Winner of the Lambda Chi Alpha Order or Merit.
Faculty and administration
- Benjamin Lee Arnold - later became president of Oregon State University
- Steve Beverly - professor of broadcasting and expert on British and American gameshows
- Ed Bryant (R) - Tennessee politician
- Randall Bush - philosophy professor and fiction writer
- Stephen Carls - chair of the History Department and expert 20th-Century France, World War I, Europe between the two world wars, and French arms manufacturer Louis Loucheur.
- David Dockery - University president
- Roger Duke - author, professor
- David P. Gushee - ethicist, author of Kingdom Ethics
- George H. Guthrie - expert on the Epistle to the Hebrews
- Ray Van Neste - expert on the Pastoral Epistles, and contributor to the ESV Study Bible
- Harry Lee Poe - Charles Colson Chair of Faith and Culture
- C. Pat Taylor - president of Southwest Baptist University.[24][25]
References
- ^ http://www.uu.edu/about/history.cfm
- ^ http://www.uu.edu/about/history.cfm
- ^ http://www.uu.edu/about/.
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(help) - ^ History | Union University
- ^ Union 2010
- ^ http://www.uu.edu/about/history.cfm.
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(help) - ^ Union University Recovery, http://www.uurecovery.com/
- ^ http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,328885,00.html
- ^ Toll of Deadly Tornadoes in South Climbs Past 50 - New York Times
- ^ UUEmergency
- ^ Devastated Union University won't reopen till Feb. 18
- ^ Union University News Release - 11/12/02
- ^ A 7-foot street-sign bearing the words Union Univ was also blown an impressive 40 miles or so where it was found in a field in Huntingdon, TN. AID=/20080207/NEWS01/802070326 Union's damage estimates may reach $40M | jacksonsun.com
- ^ http://www.uu.edu/jackson/map.cfm.
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(help) - ^ http://www.uu.edu/germantown.
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(help) - ^ http://www.uu.edu/hendersonville.
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(help) - ^ http://www.uu.edu/centers/olford/.
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(help) - ^ http://www.uu.edu/studentservices/residencelife.
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(help) - ^ http://www.uu.edu/athletics.
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(help) - ^ http://www.uu.edu/studentlife/greek.
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(help) - ^ https://www.uu.edu/events/scholarshipbanquet.
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(help) - ^ http://www.uu.edu/events/unionforum.
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(help) - ^ http://www.ncahlc.org/index.php?Action=ShowBasic&Itemid=192&instid=1465&option=com_directory
- ^ http://www.mobaptist.org/am2008/article154528c1583780.htm
External links
- Universities and colleges in Tennessee
- Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools
- Universities and colleges affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention
- Educational institutions established in 1823
- Council for Christian Colleges and Universities
- National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities members
- Universities and colleges accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools