Rhodes College is a private liberal arts college in Memphis, Tennessee. Historically affiliated with the Presbyterian Church, it is a member of the Associated Colleges of the South. It is a nationally ranked liberal arts and sciences college with more than 50 majors, interdisciplinary majors, minors and academic programs.
About Rhodes College in brief

Stewart. In 1879, Stewart College was renamed Southwestern Presbyterian University in 1879. It added an undergraduate School of Theology under the leadership of Dr. Joseph R. Wilson, father of President Woodrow Wilson, which operated until 1917. During the early 20th century the college had still not fully recovered from the Civil War and faced dwindling financial support and inconsistent enrollment. In 1925, President Diehl’s most significant change to the college came in 1925, when he orchestrated the movement of Rhodes’ campus from Clarksville to its present location in Memphis. During Rhodes’ sixteen-year presidency the college admitted its first Black students; added ten new buildings, including Burrow Library, Mallory Gymnasium and the emblematic Halliburton Tower; increased enrollment from 600 to 900; founded a campus chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa Society; and grew the endowment to over USD 14 million. The college has grown into the nationally ranked college that it is today. It also offers a wide range of majors and minors, including business, journalism, English, music, nursing, nursing and the liberal arts, and a wide variety of minors and minors. It has an endowment of more than $14 million, including a $1 million endowment for the College of Arts and Sciences, which was established in the early 1960s to help fund research and development of new technologies. The College of the Arts and Science is a non-profit, non-sectarian, private institution.
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This page is based on the article Rhodes College published in Wikipedia (as of Jan. 09, 2021) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






