- For other institutions of higher education using the name
Centenary College, see Centenary
College

Magale Library at Centenary
College

Anderson Choral Building at
Centenary College

Entrance to Meadows Museum at
Centenary College

Decorative sculpture on the
grounds of Centenary College
Centenary College of
Louisiana is an independent United Methodist, primarily undergraduate, liberal
arts and sciences college in Shreveport, Louisiana
. The college is one of the founding members
of the
Associated
Colleges of the South, a pedagogical organization consisting of
sixteen Southern liberal arts colleges.
History
Centenary
College of Louisiana is the oldest chartered liberal arts college
in the United
States
west of the Mississippi River. The lineage of the
college dates back to 1825, when the College of Louisiana was
opened in Jackson
, Louisiana
. The school enjoyed early success, but
struggled financially until Centenary College of Clinton
, Mississippi
(founded 1839) agreed to merge with the Jackson
campus, creating Centenary College of
Louisiana in 1845. The college prospered until the
beginning of the
American Civil
War. Three lines, written in a large bold hand, cover the
entire page of the faculty minute-book dated October 7, 1861:
"Students have all gone to war--College suspended, and God Help the
Right!" During this time, the Jackson campus was used as a
Confederate hospital, and was sacked upon arrival of
Union troops in 1863. The old
campus is presently operated and preserved as a state historic site
by the Louisiana Office of State Parks.
Never regaining the footing it had in the 1840s and 1850s, the
college moved to Shreveport in 1908 and immediately enjoyed
success. Mansfield Female College, the first women's college
founded west of the Mississippi (1855), merged with Centenary in
1930. President
George Sexton outlined
campus growth and prosperity in the 1920s and 1930s, including the
architectural design that largely remains today.
During that time,
Centenary was a football
powerhouse, whose fame included wins over Louisiana State
University
, University of Texas at Austin
, and University of Notre Dame
.
The academic reputation of Centenary has remained strong since the
1920s. Centenary is now regularly found at the top of its category
in the annual
college
and university rankings published by
U.S. News and World Report
magazine. In 2007,
Newsweek named Centenary
the "Hottest Liberal Arts School You Never Heard Of" in its "25
Hottest Universities" feature.
Campus
Centenary is just south of downtown Shreveport, in the historic
Highland Area. The campus is noted for its distinctive
Georgian architecture and
well-maintained grounds. According to IMDB.Com, the film,
The Initiation of Sarah, starring
Jennifer Tilly was filmed using Centenary as fictional Temple Hill
University.
Major buildings
- Magale Library is the most visible landmark on campus.
- Hargrove Memorial Amphitheatre is a
2,000-seat band shell and host of traditional campus events,
including the annual Summer Band Concert Series.
- Hurley Music Building is home to the Hurley School of
Music.
- Anderson Choral Building houses a state-of-the-art auditorium
and practice facilities designed for various ensembles, including
the Centenary Camerata, a choir dedicated to high level
performances of choral works from the Middle Ages to the 21st
century, and the Centenary College Choir, a choral group that has
performed on six continents and received seven consecutive
invitations to perform at the White House for two presidents.
- Feazel Instrumental Hall house state-of-the-art orchestral
music space.
- The Marjorie Lyons Playhouse, named for the wife of Louisiana
Republican politician Charlton
Lyons, is home to the Department of Theatre and Dance and hosts
several productions each year.
- Mickle Hall, constructed in 1949-50, has been renovated to
offer cutting-edge science classrooms and labs.
- The
Samuel Peters Research Center houses the only Jack London museum
east of San
Francisco, California
.
- The geodesic Gold Dome sports arena is host to numerous events,
including basketball, volleyball and gymnastics competitions.
- Meadows Museum of Art at Centenary College offers exhibitions
throughout the year and hosts area school children for morning
visits and arts education activities.
- The Centenary Fitness Center contains a competition-size
swimming pool, an indoor running
track, gymnasium, exercise and free-weight
equipment areas and racquetball courts
as well as specially equipped rooms for dance, aerobics, and
classroom instruction.
Organization
The university offers 43 majors and 9 interdisciplinary minors in
the traditional liberal arts and sciences, fine arts, and select
professional programs in
business administration,
communication,
education, and Christian Leadership Center. Across
all disciplines, Centenary stresses close interaction between
students and faculty members. Undergraduate research is
particularly emphasized.
Radio station KSCL
91.3FM broadcasts from the campus, a
progressive community station dedicated to
community events and
alternative
music, from
college rock and
jazz to local
Cajun music
and
zydeco.
The Conglomerate, Centenary's independent press, is a
weekly publication that circulates 20 issues per academic year. The
paper is staffed entirely by students, and is paid for by student
fees and advertisement. Originally called
The Maroon and
White, the paper changed its name to
The Conglomerate
in 1923.
Student life
, the university enrolled 905 undergraduate and 107 graduate students. 59% of the first-year students came from the state of Louisiana, while 3% came from outside the United States. The median composite ACT score of incoming students was 26. Full-time faculty numbered 96, 94% of whom held a terminal degree in their field.
Centenary hosts six social
fraternities and sororities. For
the women there is
Chi Omega and
Zeta Tau Alpha. For the men there is the
Kappa Alpha Order,
Theta Chi,
Kappa Sigma,
Tau Kappa Epsilon, and
Alpha Phi Alpha, who has a joint charter
from Centenary and
Louisiana State
University in Shreveport. The school hosts chapters of several
academic honor organizations, including Sigma Alpha Iota,
Omicron Delta Kappa,
Alpha Chi, Kappa Pi, and
Sigma Tau Delta.
Centenary has developed an
honor code -
the teachers may leave the room for exams and at the end of the
test students write "I have neither given nor received any
unauthorized aid on this assignment nor have I seen anyone else do
so." If someone is seen cheating, the written statement would
elaborate and say "with the exception of...". This is highly
regarded and infractions are sent to the student-run Honor Court, a
judicial review board. The Honor Code is also written on any paper
that is submitted for a grade.
Athletics
Centenary is currently a member of the
NCAA Division I's
The Summit League, however the school
recently gave the Summit League notice that they will be leaving in
2011
[91323]. Centenary will be moving its athletics
from Division I to
Division III
within the next two to three years
[91324]. The
American Southwest Conference
is one possibility
[91325] for Division III affiliation.
Fellow
Associated Colleges of
the South member Birmingham-Southern College
made a similar move, to the Southern Collegiate
Athletic Conference, in 2006. Centenary is the smallest
Division I school in the country.
The school is well-known for its
basketball prominence in the late 1970s being the
college for NBA great
Robert Parish,
and
golf ability—in the early 1980s
PGA Tour golfer
Hal
Sutton played there. The school sport's nickname is the
gentleman; the women's sports' nickname is
the
lady. Prior to adopting the Gentleman
nickname, Centenary's football team was known as the Old Ironsides
and had a reputation as a fearsome and powerful team with a
penchant for playing rough. To clean up their image, they selected
the Gentleman nickname.
Recently, a student driven initiative asked for a
mascot to compliment to the Ladies and Gents. From
Centenary's website, "In recent years, Centenary has examined the
role and impact of the mascot through informal SGA student/faculty
forums, alumni surveys and questionnaires, the campus diversity
climate assessment and so on. At the end of last school year, a
Mascot Inquiry committee was formed by SGA to discuss this ongoing
issue. The students have been asking for a mascot that inspires
enthusiasm. We respect the student’s request for the addition of a
mascot for the school and want to create an identity that embodies
our history, tradition and uniqueness."
[91326]
The new mascot was announced at halftime of the Men's Basketball
game 6 December 2007. The winner was
Catahoula and Rick DelaHaya, Director
of Marketing, surprised the crowd by bringing out a Catahoula named
Skeeter (SKEE-Tur) which the College has rescued from an animal
shelter in Houston, Texas. Now the school goes by both the
Gentlemen and the Catahoulas.
[91327]
People
Presidents
Notable alumni
- Calhoun Allen (1921–1991) -
Shreveport mayor from 1970–1978, utilities
commissioner from 1962–1970, and city council member (1991)
- Adrian Paul Aucoin M.D.
(Class of 2003) - Physican, Industrialist, Civic Leader
- Algie D. Brown (Class of 1934, 1910-2004) - Member of
the Louisiana House of
Representatives from 1948-1972
- John Corrington - poet and author; one of the early television writing pioneers
- Scott Durbin -
Member of the children's music group Imagination Movers
- D. L. Dykes,
Jr. (1917–1997) - pastor of First United Methodist Church in
Shreveport from 1955-1984; urged racial harmony in civil rights movement; known for
opposition to "Religious Right"
- Lovette Hill -
former head baseball coach for the University of Houston

- Cal Hubbard -
former professional football player, member of Baseball Hall
of Fame
and the Professional
Football Hall of Fame
- Edward Kennon - Shreveport-area
developer and former member of the Louisiana Public Service
Commission (1973-1984)
- Clyde Lee - former head
football coach for the University of Houston

- Max T. Malone - former state senator from Caddo and Bossier
parishes, businessman
- Mike Mann - innovator in Lasik
surgery.
- Fred C. McClanahan (1918–2007) - businessman, United States Air Force officer,
congressional candidate
- Taylor Frost Moore (Class of 1969) - Shreveport businessman;
owner of the former Shreveport Captains - now Frisco RoughRiders; coached Centenary
baseball team, Centenary athletic director
(2003–2006). Brother, Loy Moore, former trustee, manages family
real estate, timber, oil and natural gas holdings in Bossier and Claiborne parishes
- Charlotte Moorman -
avant-garde performance artist
- Robert Parish - National Basketball Association Hall of Fame Center,
nicknamed "The Chief"
- Robert G. Pugh (Class of 1946, 1924-2007) - Shreveport
attorney, civic leader, and gubernatorial advisor
- E.S. Richardson (Class of 1936, 1875–1950) --
former president of Louisiana
Tech University
- Edward White Robertson
(1823–1887) -- United
States Representative from Louisiana
- Virginia Shehee (Class of 1943,
born 1923) -- first woman to have served in the Louisiana State Senate;
businesswoman and philanthropist
- Linus A. Sims - educator who founded Southeastern
Louisiana University
in Hammond
- Ronald L. Sawyer Jr. (Class of 1991) Businessman,
Philanthropist and Dancing With The Stars Finalist
- Hal Sutton - PGA
Tour golfer; captain of the 2004 U.S. Ryder Cup team
- J. Smith Young (1834–1916) was a member of the
United States
House of Representatives from Louisiana
Staff
References
- About
Centenary College Accessed November 19, 2007.
- City of Mansfield attractions Accessed November 24,
2007.
External links