Bethel College (Tennessee)
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Established | 1842 |
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Type | Private |
Robert D. Prosser | |
Undergraduates | 776 |
Postgraduates | 67 |
Location | McKenzie, Tennessee, USA |
Campus | Rural, 100 acres |
Mascot | Wildcats |
Colors | Purple & Gold |
For other institutions of this name, see the Bethel College disambiguation page.
Bethel College is a Cumberland Presbyterian college in McKenzie, Tennessee. It was founded in 1842 in McLemoresville, Tennessee as Bethel Seminary, becoming Bethel College in 1850, and given a state charter in 1847, making it one of the oldest colleges to use the name "Bethel College."[citation needed] There was a brief time during the American Civil War that the college was closed but it was reopened as a co-educational institution in 1865. The college relocated in 1872 to its current campus in McKenzie. In 1906 when the Union (a church governing body) closed all ten Cumberland Presbyterian colleges, only Bethel reopened, becoming, as it remains, the only Cumberland Presbyterian college. Bachelors and Masters degrees are available through Bethel College. The sports teams are nicknamed the Wildcats and the Lady Wildcats. They participate in the NAIA's TranSouth and Mid-South Conferences. The school also maintains a center in Nashville aimed at the "non-traditional" student (employed adults aged over 24).
[edit] External links
TranSouth Athletic Conference |
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Bethel • Blue Mountain • Crichton • Cumberland • Freed–Hardeman • Lambuth • Lyon • Martin Methodist • Mid–Continent • Trevecca • Union |
Mid-South Conference |
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Belhaven • Bethel • Campbellsville • Cumberland U • Georgetown • Lambuth • Lindsey Wilson • Pikeville • Union • Univ. of Cumberlands • Virginia–Wise |
It is a good school