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Simmons College of Kentucky [Louisville] (1879- )

Simmons College of Kentucky, the state’s oldest African American college, was founded in 1879. The college was established by former slaves to train the sons and daughters of fellow African Americans. In August of 1865, Rev. Henry Adams led the effort to create the institution where he proposed a college be established for former enslaved people at the State Convention of Colored Baptist Churches meeting at Louisville.  

Follow up efforts to create the college languished until November 1879 when the Trustees of the Convention of Colored Baptist Churches of Kentucky bought four acres of land in Louisville to serve as the campus for the institution. The college was first known as the Kentucky Normal Theological Institute and its first president was Rev. Elijah P. Marrs.

In 1880, Dr. William J. Simmons succeeded Rev. Marrs as president and soon the schools fortunes increased.  Simmons, a former slave, had helped develop Howard Universitys teacher training programs.  Under Dr. Simmonss leadership the school’s offerings increased.  To a primarily liberal arts curriculum he added courses in medicine, law, music, business, and theology.  He also encouraged competitive intra and intramural sports and led the effort to gain university status. After a charter amendment in 1884, the college was recognized as a state university.

In 1893, Kentucky Normal University had 159 students.  By 1900, in partnership with the University of Louisville, the University offered professional degrees in nursing and law. The University proudly and accurately claimed that most African Americans in Kentucky who were physicians, teachers, ministers, and lawyers before 1920 had attended the University.  The University became the only African American higher institution in the nation other than Howard University with both medical and law departments.  In 1918 in recognition of the impact of Dr. Simmonss ten years of leadership (1880-1890) on the University, the Board of Trustees renamed it Simmons University.  By 1922 the campus had

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