Fisk University is an historically black university founded in 1866 in Nashville, Tennessee, U.S. The world-famous Fisk Jubilee Singers started as a group of students who performed to earn enough money to save the school at a critical time of financial shortages. They toured to raise funds to build the first building for the education of freedmen. They succeeded and funded construction of the renowned Jubilee Hall, now a designated National Historic Landmark. The 40-acre campus is a historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
In 1930, Fisk was the first African-American institution to gain accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. Accreditations for specialized programs quickly followed. In 1952, Fisk was the first predominantly black college to earn a Phi Beta Kappa charter. Organized as the Delta of Tennessee Chapter of the Phi Beta Kappa National Honor Society that December, the chapter inducted it's first student members on April 4, 1953.
On March 12, 2008, Nashville's Metro Council passed a resolution declaring March 19 Fisk University Day in honor of its record of academic excellence.[1]
History
In 1866 six months after the end of the Civil War, leaders of the northern American Missionary Association (AMA): John Ogden, Reverend Erastus Milo Cravath, field secretary; and Reverend Edward Parmelee Smith founded the Fisk Free Colored School, for education of freedmen. AMA support meant the organization tried to use its sources across the country to aid education for freedmen. Enrollment jumped from 200 to 900 in the first several months of the school, indicating freedmen's strong desire for education, with ages of students ranging from seven to seventy. The school was named in honor of General Clinton B. Fisk of the Tennessee Freedmen's Bureau, who made unused barracks available to the school, as well as establishing the first free schools for white and black children in Tennessee. In addition, he endowed Fisk with a total of $30,000. The American Missionary Association's work was supported by the United Church of Christ, which retains an affiliation with the university.[2] Fisk opened to classes on January 9, 1866.
With Tennessee's passage of legislation to support public education, leaders saw a need for training teachers, and Fisk University was incorporated as a normal school for college training in August 1867. Cravath organized the College Department and the Mozart Society, the first musical organization in Tennessee. Rising enrollment added to the needs of the university. In 1870 Adam Knight Spence became principal of the Fisk Normal School. To raise money for the school's education initiatives, his wife Catherine Mackie Spence traveled throughout the United States to set up mission Sunday schools in support of Fisk students, organizing endowments through the AMA.[3] With a strong interest in religion and the arts, Adam Spence supported the start of a student choir. In 1871 the student choir went on a fund-raising tour in Europe; they were the start of the Fisk Jubilee Singers. They raised nearly $50,000, which enabled the construction of Jubilee Hall.[4] The building was designated a National Historic Landmark.
During the 1880s Fisk had an active building program, as well as expanding its curriculum offerings. By the turn of the century, it added black teachers and staff to the university, and a second generation of free blacks entered classes.[4]
In 1947 Fisk heralded its first African-American president with the arrival of Charles Spurgeon Johnson. Johnson was a premier sociologist, a scholar who had been the editor of Opportunity magazine, a noted periodical of the Harlem Renaissance.
In 2002 Fisk University and Case Western University in Cleveland, Ohio established an educational partnership to expand opportunities for students, faculty and staff at both institutions: Fisk with the special qualities of a small liberal arts college and Case Western with others as a major research university. "Through the partnership, students have the chance to enroll in dual-degree programs and participate in student exchanges and joint research with a national or international scope. The possibilities that await faculty members at both institutions are equally as stimulating. The collaborative agreement has paved the way for joint research, faculty exchanges, and distance-learning classes facilitated by cutting-edge technology."[5]
Since 2004, Fisk University has been directed by its 14th president, the Honorable Hazel O'Leary, former Secretary of Energy under President William Jefferson Clinton. She is the second woman to serve as president of the university. On June 25, 2008, Fisk announced that it had successfully raised $4 million during the fiscal year ending June 30. It ended nine years of budget deficits and qualified for a Mellon Foundation challenge grant.[citation needed]
Campus
Jubilee Hall, which was recently restored, is the oldest and most distinctive structure of Victorian architecture on the 40-acre (160,000 m²) Fisk campus.
Theological Hall, circa 1900
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Music, art, and literature collections
Fisk University is the home of a music literature collection founded by the noted Harlem Renaissance figure Carl van Vechten.
Alfred Stieglitz Collection
In 1949, painter Georgia O'Keeffe facilitated the exchange of 99 paintings from the estate of her husband, Alfred Stieglitz. She made an outright gift of two of her own paintings to the school. These were displayed at the University's Carl Van Vechten Gallery.
In 2005, mounting financial difficulties led the University trustees to vote to sell two of the paintings, O'Keeffe's "Radiator Building" and Marsden Hartley's "Painting No. 3". (Together these were estimated to be worth up to 45 million U.S. dollars). However, the Georgia O'Keeffe Museum (the legal guardians of her estate) and others sued to stop the sale on the basis that the original bequest did not allow the art to be sold. At the end of 2007 a plan to share the collection with the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art to earn money was being fought in court by the O'Keeffe Museum.[6]
Science programs
Fisk University has a strong record of academic excellence: it has graduated more African Americans who go on to earn PhDs in the natural sciences than any other institution.[7]
Notable alumni
| Name |
Class year |
Notability |
Reference |
| Mandisa Lynn Hundley |
2003 |
An American Christian Contermporary Singer/Songwriter - professionally known as Mandisa, is a Grammy and Dove Award-nominated American singer and was the ninth-place finalist in the fifth season (2006) of American Idol |
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| Lillian Hardin Armstrong |
1915 |
jazz pianist/composer, second wife of Louis Armstrong |
|
| Marion Barry |
|
former mayor of Washington, D.C. |
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| St. Elmo Brady |
|
first African American to earn a doctorate in chemistry |
|
| Joyce Bolden |
|
first African-American woman to serve on the Commission for Accreditation of the National Association of Schools of Music |
|
| Cora Brown |
|
first African-American woman elected to a state senate |
|
| Hortense Canady |
|
past national president of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated |
|
| Johnnetta Cole |
|
anthropologist, former President of Spelman College and Bennett College |
|
| W. E. B. Du Bois |
1888 |
sociologist, scholar, first African-American to earn a Ph.D. from Harvard |
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| John Hope Franklin |
1935 |
historian, professor, scholar, author of landmark text From Slavery to Freedom |
|
| Nikki Giovanni |
1967 |
poet, author, professor, scholar |
|
| Louis George Gregory |
|
Hand of the Cause in the Bahá'í Faith |
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| Alcee Hastings |
|
U.S. Congressman and former U.S. district court judge |
|
| Roland Hayes |
|
concert singer |
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| Robert James |
|
former NFL cornerback |
|
| Ted Jarrett |
|
R&B recording artist and producer |
|
| Dr. Charles Jeter |
1971 |
father of Derek Jeter |
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| James Weldon Johnson |
|
author, poet and civil rights activist, author of Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing, known as the "Negro National Anthem" |
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| Percy Lavon Julian |
|
first African-American chemist and second African-American from any field to become a member of the National Academy of Sciences |
|
| Matthew Knowles |
|
Father and manager of Beyoncé Knowles |
|
| John Lewis |
|
politician, civil rights activist, former President of Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) |
|
| Jimmie Lunceford |
1925 |
famous bandleader in the swing era |
|
| Alma Powell |
|
wife of Gen. Colin Powell |
|
| Kay George Roberts |
|
orchestral conductor |
|
| Martha Lynn Sherrod |
|
Presiding District Court Judge, first African American to win an at-large election in North Alabama since Reconstruction |
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| Ida B. Wells |
|
American civil rights activist and women's suffrage advocate |
|
| Kym Whitley |
|
actress, comedienne |
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| Yetta Young |
1991 |
First to produce all African-American celebrity cast of the Obie-Award winning play The Vagina Monologues |
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Notable faculty
References
- ^ "RESOLUTION NO. RS2008-188". Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County. http://www.nashville.gov/mc/resolutions/term_2007_2011/rs2008_188.html.
- ^ Reavis L. Mitchell, Jr., "Clinton Bowen Fisk", The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, 2002, accessed 3 Mar 2009
- ^ Biography: Adam Knight Spence, Spence Family Collection, Fisk University Library, accessed 3 Mar 2009
- ^ a b "Fisk University", The Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture, 2002, accessed 3 Mar 2009
- ^ About the Partnership, Case-Western University, accessed 3 Mar 2009
- ^ "Search for cash turns into battle over art for Fisk University". CNN.com. CNN. 2007-12-27. http://www.cnn.com/2007/US/12/28/fisk.art.collection.ap/index.html.
- ^ RESOLUTION NO. RS2008-188: A resolution to recognize and declare Fisk University Day in Nashville, Tennessee on March 19, 2008, Nashville Metropolitan Council, accessed 3 Mar 2009
External links