Benedictine College
Motto | Forward. Always Forward. (2010)[1] |
---|---|
Type | Private, Undergraduate |
Established | 1971 by the merger of Mount St. Scholastica College (founded 1923) and St. Benedict's College (founded 1858) |
President | Stephen D. Minnis |
Undergraduates | 1,422 |
Location | , , USA |
Campus | Rural |
Colors | Black Red |
Mascot | Rocky the Raven |
Website | www.Benedictine.edu |
Benedictine College is a co-educational university in Atchison, Kansas, founded in 1971 by the merger of St. Benedict's College (established in 1858) for men and Mount St. Scholastica College (established in 1923) for women. It is a Roman Catholic, Benedictine, liberal arts, and residential college located on bluffs overlooking the Missouri River, northwest of Kansas City, Missouri. Benedictine is one of a number of U.S. Benedictine colleges, and is sponsored by St. Benedict's Abbey and Mount St. Scholastica Monastery. The abbey has a current population of some thirty-five monks, while the monastery numbers around 153 sisters.
History
The predecessors for the modern university were Mount St. Scholastica College, an all-women's campus named for Benedict of Nursia's twin sister Scholastica, and St. Benedict's College, an all-men's campus named for Benedict of Nursia, founder of modern western monasticism. In 1970, Fr. Alcuin Hemmen, OSB, president of St. Benedict's College, announced that St. Benedict's would become a co-educational college, causing Sr. Mary Noel Walter, OSB, president of Mount St. Scholastica College to organize discussion of a merger of the two colleges.[2] It was agreed upon, and the universities merged on July 1, 1971 to form the current Benedictine College. The separate colleges' corporations remain in existence for land ownership purposes[3][4] and allowed the newly formed college a free 50 year lease of the separate colleges' facilities on their campuses. Benedictine College officially terminated the lease of the facilities on its South Campus from Mount St. Scholastica College on October 1, 1989 amidst financial hardship.[5] It continues to lease property from St. Benedict's College.
Four Pillars
The college has tried to build its core values around four "pillars" -- Catholic, Benedictine, Liberal Arts, Residential—which exemplify the Benedictine experience.
Academics
The most popular majors at Benedictine are Business, Education and Theology. Commerce, teaching and the faith are historically significant interests of both the college and the Benedictine order.[6]
The business department offers five specialized Bachelor degrees and specialized EMBA and MBA degrees. The college publishes the Journal of International Business.[7]
The education department offers licensure programs in Elementary Education (K-6); Special Education (K-6 and 6-12); Secondary (6 - 12) and (Pre-K-12) and in Education in Biology, Chemistry, English/Language Arts, French and Spanish, History/Government/Economics/Sociology, Mathematics, Music, Physical Education/Health, Psychology, and Physics. The school offers a Master of Arts in School Leadership (PreK-12).[8]
The Theology department is the result of a 2007 shift from a Religious Studies program to a Catholic Theology program. The school publicly requires all Theology professors to have signed the canon-law mandatum [9] as implemented by the U.S. bishops,[10] and to take the oath of fidelity.[11] The National Catholic Register's Catholic Identity College Guide[12] notes that the president has made a public profession of faith and taken the oath of fidelity; the majority of the board of trustees is Catholic and the school's mandatum requirement is public. According to the Cardinal Newman Society's "The Newman Guide to Choosing a Catholic College" guide,[13] the theology department shares the college's institutional commitment to the magisterium of the Catholic Church.
Benedictine College's Discovery program [14] gives students the opportunity to create and present original projects in any discipline. In 2010, Discovery Day included 80 presentations featuring the works of 145 students, 40 faculty/staff members, and 18 academic departments; "more than 1800 students have participated in Benedictine’s Discovery Day events since its inception in 1996. In that time, most faculty members and academic departments have taken an active role in sponsoring student projects." [15]
Performing arts
The college offers programs in the performing arts, in majors such as Art, Music, Music Composition, and Theatre Arts with interdisciplinary majors in Music Marketing, Music Education, and Theatre Arts Management, with minors available in Dance, Theatre Arts, and Music. The college features two performance spaces: the Mabee Theatre seats approximately 130 and the O'Malley-McAllister Auditorium seats around 545 people. The Abbey Church is also utilized for organ recitals, orchestra, and choral performances.
The college's music department traces its roots to Mount St. Scholastica Academy, now the modern Maur Hill - Mount Academy, when in 1863 the Benedictine sisters were said to have first purchased a house and then a piano. The music department of the college was one of the first cooperative departments between the former two colleges, having been formed in 1964.
Athletics
The mascot "Raven" is associated with St. Benedict, as legend has it a raven would bring the sixth-century saint food during his time as a hermit in the mountains near Subiaco, Italy. The legend also has the raven saving St. Benedict from eating poisoned bread.
The Ravens compete in fifteen varsity intercollegiate sports (NAIA and Heart of America Athletic Conference), with men’s teams in baseball, basketball, cross country, football, soccer, and track and field. Women’s athletics include teams in basketball, cross-country, soccer, softball, track, and volleyball. Benedictine’s cheerleading and spirit squads have been recognized nationally.
Faith life
Mass is offered to students four times daily in several places, including St. Benedict's Abbey in its Abbey Church, St. Benedict's Church (a parish connected to one of the campus dorms, Ferrell Hall), and St. Martin's Chapel (located within the basement of another dorm, St. Martin's Memorial Hall). The Fellowship of Catholic University Students (FOCUS), a collegiate leadership apostolate, was founded at Benedictine College by Curtis Martin. Other active religious groups on campus include Communion and Liberation, Pax Christi, Ravens Respect Life, Partners in Prayer (in conjunction with Mount St. Scholastica), Great Adventure Bible Timeline, Fellowship of Christian Athletes, Households and Varsity Catholic [16] and the Knights of Columbus.
The college hosts pilgrimages to Rome and the Holy Land as well as local pilgrimage sites.
Campus worship opportunities [17] include: Life of Prayer, Divine Praise Night featuring adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, Thursday night prayer meetings, traditional Catholic processions and Guadalupe Day. Many students participate in perpetual adoration at St. Benedict’s Parish on the edge of campus. The Chaplet of Divine Mercy is recited weekly. The president leads the rosary weekly in the chapel.
Students pray the Divine Office with the monks in St. Benedict’s Abbey or the sisters of Mount St. Scholastica Monastery. Lectio Divina is also offered at the Mount.
There are several places of prayer on or adjacent to campus: St. Martin’s Chapel, St. Benedict’s Abbey Church, Outdoor Stations of the Cross, Guadalupe Chapel and St. Joseph Chapel in the Abbey. Retreats, conferences and performances that college ministry offers to students includes Jam for the Lamb,” and BC Koinonia.
The school built another Marian Grotto, located in the center of campus, and Archbishop Joseph Naumann dedicated it in 2009.[18] It is one of three outdoor devotional spaces dedicated to Mary located on the campus. The newest grotto was the site of the May Crowning "send-off" of 11 student vocations to the priesthood and religious life this year.[19] The college is located within the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Kansas City in Kansas, though it is not run by the Archdiocese.
Campus
Buildings on campus include:
- Amino Center
- Bishop Fink Hall
- Cafeteria
- Cray-Seaberg Hall (Cray Manor until 2010)
- Haverty Center (Gymnasium until 2001)
- Old Gymnasium
- The Raven Roost
- Library
- Mother Teresa Center for Nursing and Health Education (Ramsay Medical Building until 2010)
- Snowden House
- St. Benedict Hall (Administration Building until 2007)
- Mabee Theater
- Student Union
- O'Malley-McAllister Auditorium
- Ralph Nolan Gymnasium
- Sr. Mary Noel Walter Atrium
- Westerman Hall (Science Hall until 1989)
Campus Housing
- Courtney S. Turner Hall (St. Augustine's Hall until 2006) - A freshmen male dorm. Houses 140 freshmen men. [20]
- St. Augustine's Lounge
- Cray-Seaberg Hall (upper level) - Sophomore male dorm. Houses 42 sophomore men. [21]
- Ferrell Hall (Freshman Hall until 2001) - Female dorm. Houses 142 women (generally Juniors). [22]
- Legacy Apartments - A collection of three halls (listed below) that house 192 upperclassmen, in total. The different halls switch from being all-male to all-female, depending on the needs of student housing for the year. [23]
- Legacy Hall
- Kremmeter Hall
- Wolf Hall
- McDonald Hall - Female dorm. Houses 160 sophomore women. Rooms are set up in a "Suite style" such that eight girls are in a suite, which has four rooms, two bathrooms and a lounge. [24]
- Schroll Center
- Newman Hall - Male dorm. Houses 140 freshman and sophomores. [25]
- Row Houses - Houses 27 upperclassmen. Like the apartments, houses can vary from all-male to all-female depending on the needs for student housing. [26]
- Hartman House
- Schirmer House
- St. Joseph Hall - Housing for 35 male upperclassmen. Each student gets his own room and shares a community bathroom. [27]
- St. Martin's Memorial Hall - A freshman female dorm. Houses 90 freshman women. [28]
- St. Martin's Chapel - A Chapel is located in the ground floor of St. Martin's Memorial Hall.
- St. Scholastica Hall - A freshman female dorm. Houses 140 freshman women. [29]
Presidents
- Sr. Mary Noel Walter, OSB, Ph.D. (Acting, July 1, 1971 to February 12, 1972)
- Fr. Gerard Senecal, OSB, Ph.D. (February 12, 1972 to May 29, 1987)
- Sr. Katherine Delaney, OSB, Ph.D. (Acting, May 29, 1987 to 1988)
- Thomas O. James, Ph.D. (1988 to 1995)
- Daniel J. Carey, Ph.D. (1995 to 2003)
- Stephen D. Minnis, J.D. (2004 to present)
Notable alumni
- Thomas Hoenig 1968?, President, Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, earned his bachelors degree in economics at St. Benedicts College in 1968.
- Irv Comp 1941?, former starting quarterback of the Green Bay Packers, member of the 1944 NFL Championship team.
- Terrance W. Gainer 1969?, Sergeant-at-Arms of the U.S. Senate for the 110th United States Congress (January 4, 2007 – present)
- Terry Hanson, 1969 Athlete and Coach in Ravens Hall of Fame who went on to a successful career in pro sports and the media.
- Kenneth O. Hartnett, 1956 Journalist. Fellow, Harvard Univ. Institute of Politics, Managing Editor, Boston Herald-American, WGBH-TV Boston.
- Darryl Jones, 1968, athlete led 1967 basketball team to NAIA National Championship, NAIA All-American and All-Decade team selection. Drafted by NBA's San Diego Rockets prior their move to Houston.
- David Koechner, America Actor. Did not graduate.
- Wangari Maathai 1964, Nobel Peace Prize Winner
- Jamie Mueller 1982?, Former professional NFL running back of the Buffalo Bills (1987–1990).
- Donn B. Murphy 1951? Ph.D., professor of theatre at Georgetown University, and president of The National Theatre in Washington D.C.
- Chris L. Rutt 1880?, inventor of Aunt Jemima pancake mix.
- Joseph P. Teasdale ex-1954, Governor of Missouri (1977-1981).
- Bob Veale, 1958, National League Strikeout leader, Pittsburgh Pirates[citation needed]
References
- ^ [1]
- ^ Sounds & Silence: The Magic of Music from Price Villa. 1863-2000. Copyright 2003, Mount St. Scholastica.
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3]
- ^ The Circuit, October 1989. Copyright Benedictine College.
- ^ [4]
- ^ Journal of International Business
- ^ [5]
- ^ [6]
- ^ [7]
- ^ [8]
- ^ Catholic Identity College Guide
- ^ Cardinal Newman Society
- ^ [9]
- ^ [10]
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=1353
- ^ [11]
- ^ [12]
- ^ [13]
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=1250
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=886
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=1251
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=1632
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=1253
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=1252
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=2060
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=1256
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=1254
- ^ http://www.benedictine.edu/benedictine.aspx?pgID=1255
External links
- Benedictine College
- Universities and colleges in Kansas
- Liberal arts colleges
- Roman Catholic universities and colleges in the United States
- Educational institutions established in 1971
- Council of Independent Colleges
- National Association of Independent Colleges and Universities members
- North Central Association of Colleges and Schools
- Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities
- Benedictine colleges and universities
- Education in Atchison County, Kansas
- Buildings and structures in Atchison County, Kansas