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Samford University is a private, coeducational university located in Homewood, Alabama, a suburb of Birmingham. In 1841, the university was founded as Howard College. Samford University is the 87th oldest institution of higher learning in the United States. Samford University is Alabama's top-ranked private university. The university enrolls 4,933 students from 44 states and 25 countries.Samford University has been nationally ranked for academic programs, value and affordability by Kiplinger's Personal Finance, The Princeton Review and Colleges of Distinction.
Samford University is a private, coeducational university located in Homewood, Alabama, a suburb of Birmingham. In 1841, the university was founded as Howard College. Samford University is the 87th oldest institution of higher learning in the United States. Samford University is Alabama's top-ranked private university. The university enrolls 4,933 students from 44 states and 25 countries.Samford University has been nationally ranked for academic programs, value and affordability by Kiplinger's Personal Finance, The Princeton Review and Colleges of Distinction.
In 1841, Samford University was founded as Howard College in Marion; Alabama. The land was donated by Reverend James H. DeVotie, who served on the Samford Board of Trustees for fifteen years and as its President for two years. The university was established after the Alabama Baptist State Convention decided to build a school for men in Perry County, Alabama. The college's first nine students began studies in January 1842 with a traditional curriculum of language, literature and sciences.In October 1854; a fire destroyed all of the college's property, including its only building. In those early years the graduation addresses of several distinguished speakers were published, including those by Thomas G. Keen of Mobile, Joseph Walters Taylor, Noah K. Davis and Samuel Sterling Sherman. While the college recovered from the fire, the Civil War began. Howard College was converted to a military hospital by the Confederate government in 1863.
During this time,
the college's remaining faculty offered basic instruction to soldiers
recovering at the hospital. For a short period after the war, federal troops
occupied the college and sheltered freed slaves on its campus. In 1865 the
college reopened. Howard College's board of trustees accepted real estate and
funding from the city of Birmingham, Alabama in 1887.
References
- Mitchell Bennett Garrett, William R. Snell, Janet Snell, Sixty Years of Howard College, 1842-1902, Howard College, 1927, p. 19 [1]
- Harris, W. Stuart (1991). Heritage of Perry County. Marion, Alabama: Perry County Historical and Preservation Society. pp. 70–92.
- "Timeline of Major Accomplishments During the Presidency of Thomas E. Corts" May 2005. Retrieved December 31, 2014.
- Flynt, Wayne Flynt (2011). Keeping the Faith: Ordinary People, Extraordinary Lives University of Alabama Press. p. 116. ISBN 0817317546. Retrieved December 2013.
- Ginny Cooper (November 12, 2013). "Westmoreland is March of Dimes Citizen of the Year" Retrieved December 31, 2014.
- "Thomas, Lee Emmett" Louisiana Historical Association, A Directory of Louisiana Biography (lahistory.org). Retrieved December 29, 2010.
- Mary Wimberley (December 16, 2014). "Samford Opens New Track/Soccer Stadium"



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