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| Lycoming College History |
The history of Lycoming College has been one of continual evolution.
The institution has been, at one time or another, an elementary and
secondary school, a seminary, a junior college and at present a
four-year liberal arts college—going through three name changes in
the process. Sold by an independent board to the Methodists (who
bought it as a source of revenue), it is today an independent
non-profit, private college, affiliated with the United Methodist
Church.
Its beginning dates back to 1812—making
Lycoming one of the 50 oldest colleges in America—when it was
founded as the Williamsport Academy, that city’s first elementary
and secondary school. The school was administered by a Board of
Trustees made up primarily of staunch Presbyterians.
By 1848, Williamsport had its own public
school system well in place, and the private school was becoming a
financial burden. A visionary circuit preacher, Rev. Benjamin H.
Crever, persuaded the Methodists to buy the school. They named the
institution Dickinson Seminary and offered college preparatory
courses. Rev. Crever is considered the school’s true founder.
The seminary operated as a private boarding
school until 1929 when a college curriculum was added and it became
the Williamsport Dickinson Junior College, the first private junior
college in Pennsylvania.
In 1947, the junior college became a
four-year degree-granting college of liberal arts and sciences. It
adopted the name Lycoming, derived from the American Indian word
"lacomic," meaning "Great Stream," a name that
enjoys local popularity as the name of the county, a township and a
creek.
In its evolutionary tradition, Lycoming
College continues to expand its programs and improve its academic
excellence with each decade, seeking to provide a truly
distinguished baccalaureate education to every student entering its
doors. |
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