| Founded
by Legislative Act on March 30, 1910, The University
of Southern Mississippi was the state’s first
state-supported teacher training school. Originally
known as Mississippi Normal College, the school
was built on 120 acres of cut over timber land donated
by Messrs. H. A. Camp, A. A. Montague and Dr. T.
E. Ross, and funded by bonds issued by the city
of Hattiesburg and Forrest County in the amount
of $250,000. A close relationship between the university,
city, and county is still maintained today.
The school’s stated purpose was to “qualify
teachers for the public schools of Mississippi.”
Mississippi Normal College opened for classes
Sept. 18, 1912, and hosted a total of 876 students
during its initial session (506 in the regular
session and 370 in the summer term).
The first president, Joseph Anderson “Joe”
Cook, oversaw construction of the original buildings
and guided the school during its formative years.
Cook served as superintendent of the Columbus,
Miss., city schools prior to being selected as
president of MNC. The school’s five original
buildings were College Hall (the academic building);
Forrest County Hall (men’s and married students’
dormitory); Hattiesburg Hall (women’s dormitory);
the Industrial Cottage (training laboratory for
home management); and the president’s home
(now the Alumni House).
Prior to 1922, the school awarded certificates,
which required at least two terms of attendance,
and diplomas, which required at least six terms.
In 1922, the school was authorized to confer the
baccalaureate degree, the first of which was awarded
in May 1922 to Kathryn Swetman of Biloxi.
In 1924, the school underwent the first of a
series of name changes. On March 7, 1924, Mississippi
Normal College became State Teachers College.
Many improvements were instituted following the
name change as STC pursued accreditation by the
Southern Association of College and Secondary
Schools (SACS). One of the improvements was construction
of the Demonstration School in 1927, which served
as a training ground for student teachers.
Sadly, on September 28, 1928, at the behest of
Gov. Theodore G. Bilbo, President Cook was summarily
dismissed by the STC Board of Trustees. The reason
given was Cook’s age (65), but onlookers
saw it as a political ploy because Cook had not
supported Bilbo in the recent gubernatorial election.
The Board of Trustees selected supervisor of
Rural Schools Claude Bennett to succeed Joe Cook
as president. Many of the faculty and staff remained
loyal to the former president and viewed Bennett
with suspicion. Nevertheless, it was during the
Bennett administration that the school was approved
for membership in the Southern Association of
Colleges and Secondary Schools in 1929.
Moreover, enrollment continued to increase, extension
courses were offered in 25 Mississippi counties,
and a strong music program was set in motion.
Unfortunately, Gov. Bilbo continued to meddle
in the internal affairs of State Teachers College
and the other state-supported institutions of
higher learning. As a result, SACS revoked the
schools accreditation in 1930.
In 1932, due to the Great Depression, the state
was unable to pay faculty salaries. Fortunately,
Hattiesburg banks arranged signature loans for
hard-pressed faculty members, and grocery stores
extended credit to those with good payment records.
In 1932, a single board of trustees was created
to oversee all of Mississippi’s institutions
of higher learning. This body replaced the separate
boards of trustees under which the institutions
had previously operated. Uppermost on the new
board’s agenda was removing political appointees
of Gov. Bilbo, so, in 1933, President Bennett
was fired.
Dr. Jennings Burton George, a Mississippi Normal
College alumnus, became the school’s third
president July 1, 1933, and the first to hold
a doctorate. The new chief executive inherited
a huge debt, which he corrected by setting strict
financial guidelines, cutting employees’
salaries, and freezing departmental budgets. His
efforts not only resulted in a balanced budget,
but each year of his administration ended with
a small surplus in the treasury.
On February 13, 1940, the school’s name
was changed for the second time. Its new name,
Mississippi Southern College, reflected the fact
that it was no longer exclusively a teachers’
college. During World War II, enrollment plummeted
to around 300 as students and faculty members
joined, or were drafted into, military service.
Both head football coach Reed Green and his assistant,
Thad “Pie” Vann, served in the armed
forces. Looking ahead to the end of the war, President
George established a $35,000 trust fund to provide
scholarships for returning veterans. He also proposed
graduate work in education, home economics, and
music.
But, in January 1945, before any of his plans
were implemented, the Board of Trustees declined
to rehire Dr. George, giving no definitive reason
for its action. The school is deeply indebted
to President George, for it was his sound fiscal
policies and managerial genius that steered it
safely through both the Great Depression and World
War II.
Dr. Robert Cecil Cook became the institution’s
fourth president, following his discharge from
the Army on July 6, 1945. President Cook, whose
credentials as an educator were impeccable, placed
academic development at the top of his agenda.
During his tenure, the Graduate Studies division
was created, and the Reading Clinic, the
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Latin American Institute, and the Speech and
Hearing Clinic were established. Greek presence
on campus was increased, the band program was
expanded, the “Dixie Darlings” precision
dance team was formed, and enrollment soared to
more than 2,000. The athletic program was strengthened,
as coaches Reed Green and Pie Vann returned from
military service and resumed their former positions.
Over the next two decades, the combined efforts
of these two outstanding coaches brought national
recognition to the Southern Miss football program.
In December 1954, Cook became the first president
to leave the office voluntarily when he resigned
to accept the position as vice president and general
manager of the Jackson State Times, a new daily
newspaper.
Dr. Richard Aubrey McLemore was named acting
president, effective January 1, 1955, and served
in that capacity until August 17, 1955. Dr. McLemore,
known to the students as “Dr. Mac,”
had been a faculty member at MSC since 1938, and
had served as professor of history, head of the
social studies division, and dean of the college.
The Board of Trustees selected State Archivist Dr.
William David McCain as the school’s fifth
president, and he assumed the office August 18,
1955, promising to keep the campus “dusty
or muddy with construction.” At least 17 new
buildings were erected during the McCain administration,
including Reed Green Coliseum. Dr. McCain’s
driving ambition, however, was to achieve university
status for MSC, a drive that was sponsored by the
Alumni Association. To that end, he reorganized
the academic programs into colleges and schools,
and on February 27, 1962, Gov. Ross Barnett signed
the bill that made Mississippi Southern College
a university: The University of Southern Mississippi.
The second watershed event of the McCain administration
occurred in September 1965 when, for the first
time in the school’s history, African-American
students were admitted. The first students were
Raylawni Young Branch and Gwendolyn Elaine Armstrong.
Other noteworthy events of the McCain era include
formation of the Oral History Program in 1971
and establishment of the Southern Miss Gulf Park
Campus in 1972. Also in 1972, the nickname of
the athletic teams was changed from “Southerners”
to “Golden Eagles.” Dr. McCain retired
from the presidency June 30, 1975. During his
20-year presidency, enrollment grew to 11,000.
On July 1, 1975, Dr. Aubrey Keith Lucas became
the sixth president of Southern Miss, having served
as instructor, director of admissions, registrar,
and dean of the Graduate School, in addition to
holding both bachelor’s and master’s
degrees from the school.
Among the accomplishments that punctuated the
Lucas years were the formation of the Teaching
and Learning Resource Center; creation of the
Faculty Senate; establishment of the Center for
International Education; replacement of the quarter
system with the semester system; creation of the
Polymer Science Institute; reorganization of the
university’s 10 schools into six colleges;
formation of the Institute for Learning in Retirement;
and affiliation with the new athletic conference,
Conference USA. After 21 years, Dr. Lucas stepped
down from the presidency December 31, 1996, saying
it was time for someone new.
Dr. Horace Weldon Fleming, Jr. assumed his duties
as the university’s seventh president January
3, 1997. During his tenure, the School of Nursing
became a college, the Office of Technology Resources
was created; a master’s program in hydrographic
science was added in the Department of Marine
Science; a master’s program in workforce
training and development was added in the School
on Engineering Technology; and online classes
were instituted.
In addition, a strategic plan for the future
was unveiled. Designed to plot the university’s
course over the next three to five years, the
plan envisions Southern Miss as “a national
university for the Gulf South.” In 2001,
Dr. Fleming introduced the public phase of a $100
million comprehensive campaign.
Dr. Fleming resigned the presidency in July 2001,
and President Emeritus Dr. Aubrey Keith Lucas
was selected to serve until the Board of Trustees
of Institutions of Higher Learning hired a new
president.
On May 1, 2002, Dr. Shelby Freeland Thames became
The University of Southern Mississippi’s
eighth president. Thames has an extensive history
at Southern Miss, starting in 1955 when he walked
onto the campus as a student earning his bachelor’s
and master’s degrees from The University
of Southern Mississippi in chemistry and organic
chemistry. His previous administrative positions
at Southern Miss were chair of the Department
of Polymer Science, dean of the College of Science
and Technology, vice president for Administration
and Regional Campuses, and executive vice president.
In 1970, he was the founder of the Department
of Polymer Science, and, in 1973, cofounder of
the Waterborne and High-Solids Coatings Symposium.
He was an inductee, in 1998, to Southern Miss’s
Alumni Hall of Fame, and in that same year, the
Polymer Science Research Center was named in honor
of Dr. Thames and is now known as the Shelby Freeland
Thames Polymer Science Research Center.
During Thames’ presidency, the state college
board voted unanimously to establish a second
campus for The University of Southern Mississippi,
and on August 19, 2002, Southern Miss admitted
its first class of freshmen on its Gulf Park Campus,
making the university the only comprehensive university
in the state with dual-campus status.
Additionally, Southern Miss has multiple teaching
sites that include Stennis Space Center, Jackson
County, Keesler Air Force Base, J.L.Scott Aquarium,
Gulf Coast Research Lab, and Pontlevoy, France.
With an enrollment of 15,050, The University
of Southern Mississippi is currently the second
largest university in the state. |