Randolph-Macon College
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Randolph-Macon College |
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Motto | Believe in the Moment of Connection |
Established | 1830 |
Type | Private, liberal arts |
President | Robert Lindgren |
Faculty | 90 |
Undergraduates | 1,125 |
Postgraduates | 0 |
Location | Ashland, Virginia, USA |
Campus | Suburban 110 acres (0.45 km²) |
Athletics | 15 varsity teams |
Colors | Old gold and Black |
Mascot | Yellow Jacket |
Website | www.rmc.edu |
- See also, Randolph College
Randolph-Macon College is a private, co-educational liberal arts college located in Ashland, Virginia, near the capital city of Richmond. Founded in 1830, the school has an enrollment of about 1,125 students.
The college offers bachelor's degrees in education, business, international relations, and computer science, in addition to the liberal arts. Its computer science department is one of the oldest in the country; in the 1960s when the program was established, many academics believed computer science to be the stuff of trade or secretarial schools.
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[edit] History
Randolph-Macon was founded in 1830 by the Virginia Methodists, and is the oldest Methodist-run college in the country. It was originally located in Boydton, near the North Carolina border but as the railroad link to Boydton was destroyed during Civil War, the college's trustees decided to relocate the school to Ashland. The college was named for statesmen John Randolph of Roanoke and Nathaniel Macon. (The original site of Randolph-Macon features a historical marker and ruins of the classroom buildings.)
The college has a historical relationship with Randolph College(formerly known as Randolph-Macon Woman's College) in Lynchburg, Virginia. The former woman's college was founded under Randolph-Macon's original charter in 1893 by the then-president William Waugh Smith; it was intended as a female counterpart to Randolph-Macon. Randolph-Macon became co-educational in 1972 and Randolph College became co-educational in 2007 and the two schools are now governed by two separate boards.
In 1892, two preparatory schools--both called Randolph-Macon Academy--were founded. The only one which remains today is Randolph-Macon Academy in Front Royal, Virginia. Randolph-Macon Academy is today the only co-educational military boarding school in the country affiliated with the United States Air Force Air Force Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps (AFJROTC).
It was in the news recently when 10-year-old Gregory R. Smith enrolled at the college in September 1999. Smith graduated in 2003 cum laude with a degree in mathematics.
[edit] Athletics
Randolph-Macon's sports teams are known as the Yellow Jackets and play in the Old Dominion Athletic Conference. The school's main rival in men's sports over the past century has been Hampden-Sydney College. The football game between Randolph-Macon and Hampden-Sydney is over 110 years old and bills itself as the "Oldest Small-College Rivalry in the South." (Randolph-Macon won the first contest 12-6 in 1893.) Most recently, the Women's Basketball team placed second nationally in Division 3 in the 2004-5 season.
Men's sports: baseball, basketball, football, golf, lacrosse, soccer, tennis
Women's sports: basketball, field hockey, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, volleyball
[edit] Notable alumni
- Macon Brock, co-founder of Dollar Tree
- Members of the rock band Carbon Leaf
- J. Rives Childs, U.S. Diplomat and noted Casanova scholar
- Randy Forbes, U.S. Congressman
- Jordan Wheat Lambert, introduced Listerine to the marketplace
- Gregg Marshall, (1985), head coach of Winthrop men's basketball team
- Walter Hines Page, journalist, U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom
- Hugh Scott, U.S. Congressman, U.S. Senator
- Gregory R. Smith, child prodigy, human rights activist
- Claude A. Swanson, U.S. Senator, Navy Secretary
- Walter Leak Steele, U.S. Congressman
[edit] Notable Faculty
- David Seth Doggett - a Professor in the 1860's, later a Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South
[edit] External links
Old Dominion Athletic Conference |
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