Asbury University
Asbury University, is a private Christian liberal arts university in Wilmore, Kentucky. Although it is a nondenominational school, the college's foundation stems from a Wesleyan-Holiness tradition. The school offers 50-plus majors across 17 departments. In the fall of 2016, Asbury University had a total enrollment of 1,854: 1,640 traditional undergraduate students and 214 graduate students. The campus of Asbury Theological Seminary, which became a separate institution in 1940, is located across the street from Asbury University.
History
Asbury College was established in 1890 by John Wesley Hughes in Wilmore, Kentucky. It was originally called the Kentucky Holiness College, but was later renamed after Bishop Francis Asbury, the "Father of American Methodism" and a circuit-riding evangelist. Asbury was instrumental in Methodist education in central Kentucky, having founded the state's first Methodist school, Bethel Academy, in 1790; its site lies near High Bridge, only about four miles south of Wilmore. After being pushed out as President of Asbury College in 1905, Hughes went on to found another college, Kingswood College, in Breckinridge County, Kentucky. Kingswood College no longer exists. Despite his disappointment over being removed at Asbury, Hughes wrote in his 1923 autobiography: "Being sure I was led of God to establish, it being my college child born in poverty, mental perplexity, and soul agony, I loved it from its birth better than my own life. As the days have come and gone, with many sad and broken-hearted experiences, my love has increased. My appreciation of what it has done, what it is doing, and what it promises to do in the future, is such that I am willing to lay down my life for its perpetuation." In 1928, Hughes was invited to break ground for Asbury College's new chapel, Hughes Auditorium, which is still in use today.Under great financial difficulty, Asbury College hired Dr. Henry Clay Morrison, a Methodist evangelist and editor of the Pentecostal Herald magazine, as its president in 1910. With the help of his Pentecostal Herald readers and his nationwide reputation as a great preacher, Morrison was able to pay off large debts owed by the college and increase its reputation and student body. After stepping down as president in 1925, Morrison was asked once again to assume the presidency in 1933 under another financial crisis. He served his second term until 1940.
Succeeding Morrison as president of Asbury College was his Executive Vice President, Z.T. Johnson, the first alumnus of the college to serve as its president. The longest-tenured president in the school's history to date, Johnson's presidency at Asbury College was marked by growth, both of the student body and the campus physical plant. Campus improvements during his administration included an amphitheater, a 9-hole golf course, an athletic field with a quarter-mile track, a farm, twenty-one duplexes, a triplex, an 18-unit apartment, eight faculty homes, five dormitories, a student center, fine arts building, a library addition, a science hall, and the Z.T. Johnson Cafeteria. During his term as president, the student enrollment rose from 526 to 1,135. It was also under Johnson's administration that Asbury College moved to full racial integration in 1962.
In 2001 The Kinlaw Library was completed. It was named in honor of Dennis F. Kinlaw and his wife Elsie. It contains over 150,000 items in several collections. There are three floors and most of the collections are on the main and top floors.
The college's immediate past president, Dr. Sandra C. Gray, was inaugurated as the seventeenth president of Asbury on October 5, 2007. She had previously served as provost and as professor of business management at the school. Her inaugural challenge was given by Mitch McConnell, United States Senator from Kentucky and Minority Leader of the Senate. Gray was the first female president of the college.
On March 5, 2010, Asbury College became Asbury University. The current president is Dr. Kevin Brown, a much-loved former faculty member of the Howard & Beverly Dayton School of Business. Dr. Brown is to be inaugurated March 6, 2020 as the eighteenth president.
Presidents
- John Wesley Hughes
- Francis F. Fitch
- Benjamin Franklin Haynes
- Newton Wray
- Aaron S. Watkins
- Henry Clay Morrison
- Lewis Robeson Akers
- Z.T. Johnson
- Karl K. Wilson
- Cornelius R. Hager
- Dennis F. Kinlaw
- John N. Oswalt
- Edwin G. Blue
- David J. Gyertson
- Paul A. Rader
- William C. Crothers
- Sandra C. Gray
- Kevin J. Brown
Academics
Undergraduate majors are divided into three distinct schools, while the School of Graduate and Professional Studies houses all graduate majors:
- College of Arts and Sciences
- School of Communication
- School of Education
School of Graduate and Professional Studies
Accreditation
Asbury University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Asbury University is an accredited institutional member of the National Association of Schools of Music. The Asbury University Department of Education is accredited by the Kentucky Department of Education and the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education, and all of its individual teacher education programs have state approval. The Asbury University Social Work Program is accredited by the Council on Social Work Education.Athletics
Asbury University teams are known as the Eagles. The university is a member of the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, primarily competing in the River States Conference. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, swimming and tennis; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis and volleyball. Women's lacrosse is the newest varsity program, beginning competition in the 2014–15 academic year. Since the RSC does not sponsor lacrosse, the lacrosse team plays in the Appalachian Athletic Conference.The school mascot is the Eagle and the school colors are purple and white.
Gallery
Notable alumni
There are more than 20,000 living alumni, who live in all 50 US states and at least 80 countries.Notable alumni include:
- Frederick Bohn Fisher – Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church in India
- Andrew N. Johnson – Methodist minister, U.S. vice presidential candidate from the Prohibition Party
- Luther B. Bridgers – pastor, evangelist, hymnwriter
- E. Stanley Jones – Missionary, Evangelist, Author, and Theologian
- J. Waskom Pickett – Missionary to India
- Lela G. McConnell – founder of the Kentucky Mountain Holiness Association
- Z.T. Johnson – Methodist minister, Asbury College President
- Edward L.R. Elson – pastor of National Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C.; Chaplain of the United States Senate
- Anna Talbott McPherson – author of more than 22 biographies, book illustrator and artist
- James B. Pritchard – Biblical archaeologist
- Mack B. Stokes – retired Bishop of the United Methodist Church
- Cornelius R. Hager – three-time President of Asbury College
- Laton E. Holmgren – General Secretary of the American Bible Society
- Wayne K. Clymer – a Bishop of the United Methodist Church
- Dennis F. Kinlaw – Author, Theologian, Evangelist, Asbury College President
- Rosalind Rinker – Author of , selected by Christianity Today magazine as the #1 most influential book shaping the way evangelicals think
- Ben Campbell Johnson - Professor Emeritus of Evangelism at Columbia Theological Seminary, Author
- Dean Jones – actor
- Ernie Steury – Missionary Doctor, Tenwek Hospital, Kenya
- Paul Rader – General of Salvation Army, Asbury College President
- Joe Frank Harris – former Governor of Georgia
- Janice Shaw Crouse – Senior Fellow at the Beverly LaHaye Institute of Concerned Women for America
- Joseph R. Pitts – United States Representative from Pennsylvania
- Ted Strickland – former Democratic Governor of Ohio and former U.S. Representative
- Leopold Frade – Third Bishop of Episcopal Diocese of Southeast Florida and former Bishop of Honduras
- David Hager – Physician, Author
- Stephen W. Wood – past member of the North Carolina General Assembly
- Steve Smith – Head Basketball Coach at Oak Hill Academy in Mouth of Wilson, VA
- Sue Bell Cobb – former Chief Justice of the Alabama Supreme Court
- Joe Hilley – New York Times best-selling author
- Gregory Van Tatenhove – Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky
- Andy Merrill – Voice artist, Space Ghost Coast to Coast, Cartoon Planet, Aqua Teen Hunger Force, and The Brak Show
- Jessica Ditto - White House Deputy Director of Communications for the Donald J. Trump administration