
Huff Hall at Pearl River Community
College
Pearl River Community
College is a public community
college in Poplarville, Mississippi
, USA
. It
was founded as Pearl River County Agricultural High School in 1909,
then became the first junior college in Mississippi in 1921.
History
Pearl River County Agricultural High School (PRCAHS) was the result
of the Mississippi Agricultural High School Law of 1908, making it
the nation's first state-funded system of agricultural high
schools. The law was found to be in violation of the separate but
equal clause in the state's constitution by the state's Supreme
Court late in 1909 when no equal opportunity was offered for the
state's African-American children. The overturned law caused all
but three of the twenty original agricultural high schools in the
state to close, since state funding was no longer available. Pearl
River County citizens came to the school's rescue, however, when
private citizens secured a loan froma local bank to fund the school
until the
Mississippi
Legislature could pass a new law which made opportunity for
both races.
Classes began on September 8, 1909 under the direction of Professor
T.M. Kelly. The entire boarding high school was located in one
three-story building erected on of land on the edge of the county's
seat, Poplarville. Classrooms and the cafeteria was located on the
building's first floor, while the girls' dormitory occupied the
second floor and the boys' dormitory occupied the third
floor.
PRCAHS, under the supervision of James Andrew Huff, added freshman
college classes to the curriculum to the school in 1921-22, making
Pearl River College the first 2-year public institution in
Mississippi. Pearl River College continued to lead the way by the
addition of sophomore classes in 1925-26.
Pearl
River College has since expanded to include four locations, the
main campus in Poplarville, the Forrest County Center and Lowery
Woodall Advanced Technology Center in Hattiesburg
, MS, and the Hancock Center in Waveland, MS.
In August 2005, PRCC's Poplarville campus suffered an estimated
$40–50 million in damage at the hand of Hurricane Katrina. This
included severe structural damage to the auditorium wing of Moody
Hall, the state's oldest junior college building, and M. R. White
Coliseum, the college's sports arena. Both the auditorium wing of
Moody Hall and the entire sports arena have been razed for student
safety. Plans are on hold due to insurance for replacement
structures. Most of the roofs on campus had to be replaced due to
the storm, and many buildings had to undergo extensive mold
remediation. The Hancock Center, on the Gulf Coast, was completely
gutted by the massive tidal surge. The main campus was shut down
for three weeks due to damages and the Hancock Center was shut down
for four weeks.
Sports
Pearl River's athletic teams are called the Wildcats, and the
football team won four straight MACJC (Mississippi Association of
Community-Junior Colleges) championships (2003, 2004, 2005, 2006)
since head coach
Tim Hatten took over the
program in 2002. Pearl River also won the 2004
National Championship of the National Junior College Athletic
Association (NJCAA) with the help of three NJCAA All-Americans,
including wide receiver
Larry
Brackins, who was selected 155th overall by the
NFL's
Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the
2005 NFL Draft; quarterback
Jimmy Oliver, and offensive lineman
Matt Lott. PRCC played for the 2006 NJCAA title in
the Pilgrim's Pride Bowl Classic in Mt. Pleasant, Tex., but lost to
Blinn College (Tex.) 19-6.
Brackins is now a member of the
Philadelphia Soul of the
Arena Football League, and the
practice squad for the
NFL New York Jets. While former Wildcat receiver
Donavan Morgan plays with the AFL's
Chicago
Rush franchise after brief NFL stints with the New York Jets,
Houston Texans, and Buffalo Bills. Larry Kendrick, Brackins' 2003
Wildcat teammate, signed on with the Ole Miss Rebels following the
one-year stint at Pearl River and was an NJCAA All-American as a
wide receiver and a defensive back, as well as being named the
NJCAA's Male Athlete of the Year in 2003. Kendrick currently plays
in the Arena 2 league.
PRCC's 2006 state title marked its 19th in school history, which is
a record for Mississippi community colleges. Oliver guided the
Wildcats to their 2004 and 2005 titles and earned NJCAA "Offensive
Player of the Year" honors both seasons, including All-American
accolades. Oliver played two seasons with Jackson State University,
guiding the Tigers to the 2007 SWAC championship.
Pearl River won four MACJC state championships during the 2003-2004
school year in football, men's basketball under head coach Richard
Mathis, women's soccer under former head coach Adam Breerwood, who
is now Dean of Student Services at PRCC; and baseball under former
head coach Jay Artigues, who is now head coach of the Southeastern
Louisiana Lions. PRCC also won the 2005 MACJC women's soccer
championship under former head coach Patrick Hayes.
Three former Wildcat players are currently in the NFL, including
San Diego Charger wide receiver
Demetrius
Byrd (who also won the 2008 BCS National Championship with the
LSU Tigers after playing for PRCC),
Washington Redskin defensive linemen
Cornelius Griffin, and Oakland Raider
defensive back
Hiram Eugene. Former
PRCC basketball standout
James
Singleton played two seasons with the Los Angeles Clippers of
the National Basketball Association (NBA) and currently plays for
the Dallas Mavericks.
Famous Alumni
Jimmy Buffett 1967
External links