Central Nazarene College

Central Nazarene College
Former names
Central Nazarene University
Type Private
Active 1909–1929
Affiliation Nazarene
President B.F. Neeley
Location Hamlin, Texas, United States
Campus Rural

The Central Nazarene College was a junior college located in Hamlin, Texas. It closed in 1929.

History

The school opened as a grammar school, academy, and junior college[1] in 1909[2] under the leadership of Reverend W. E. Fisher, superintendent of the Abilene and Hamlin districts of the Church of the Nazarene to serve the Hamlin, San Antonio, and New Mexico Districts, with J.E.L. Moore as its first president.[3] Central became the only Nazarene college in Texas when the Nazarene Bible Institute at Pilot Point, Texas was merged with it in 1911.[4] President B.F. Neeley later agreed to a consolidation with Bethany-Peniel College at Bethany, Oklahoma in 1929.[5]

Campus

The college was located southwest of downtown Hamlin and consisted of a grey stone administration building and two wooden dormitories on a 23-acre (93,000 m2) campus. Library and laboratory facilities were inadequate for standard work, however. After the college merged with the school at Bethany, the former administration building was used as a church by the local Nazarene congregation. It burned in 1934, and a new church was built to replace it in 1936.[5]

Academics

The curriculum was primarily for the education of ministers. As a "holiness" school, the charter required faculty to meet church requirements for the teaching of "sanctification."

Notes and references

  1. Handbook of American Churches
  2. HistoricMarkers.com
  3. Moore left in 1917 to be principal at Pentecostal Collegiate Institute (PCI) in North Scituate, Rhode Island. He also became the first president of Eastern Nazarene College when PCI became a liberal arts college in 1918. When the college moved to Wollaston, Massachusetts, however, Moore took the presidency at Olivet University. See James R. Cameron, Eastern Nazarene College—The First Fifty Years, 1900-1950, Nazarene Publishing House (1968).
  4. See Southern Nazarene University: History
  5. 1 2 The Handbook of Texas ONLINE: Central Nazarene College

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/14/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.