Lincoln College (Illinois)

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Lincoln College
Fall at Lincoln College, Lincoln, Illinois, showing University Hall.jpg
University Hall
Former names
Lincoln University
MottoLincoln College uniquely empowers students to realize their full potential.
TypePrivate college
Established1865; 156 years ago (1865)
PresidentDavid Gerlach
Academic staff
50
Undergraduates800
Location, ,
United States
ColorsPurple, White
   
AthleticsNAIACCAC
NicknameLynx
Sports19 varsity teams
Websitewww.lincolncollege.edu

Lincoln College is a private college in Lincoln, Illinois. It maintains an extension site in Normal, Illinois that provides adults with bachelor's degree programs. The college offers associate, bachelor's, and master's programs.

History[]

Lincoln College's roots date back to the 19th century. It is the only college named for Abraham Lincoln while he was still living. The college was established in 1865 by the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, but is now independent and has no formal church affiliation. There were a few sites that were looked at as possibilities for the institution, prior to Lincoln, Ill., however, in December 1864, the City of Lincoln was chosen. Due to the Civil War, the denomination wanted to create a college in the north because the denomination's other schools were located in the south. At this same time a movement started in the new community of Lincoln to start a college.

On February 6, 1865, the Illinois General Assembly granted the charter that established the university. President Abraham Lincoln was aware the school would be named in his honor. Lincoln University was the first institution named for Abraham Lincoln and the only one during his lifetime. The groundbreaking for University Hall, the first college building, was held on Abraham Lincoln's last living birthday, six days after the charter had been granted. By September 1866, the construction University Hall was completed and in November 1866, the college opened its doors to men and women alike. In 1868, there were three people who had earned their degrees.

In 1901, Lincoln College affiliated with the Decatur College and Industrial School (now Millikin University) in Decatur. The name of the school was changed from Lincoln University to Lincoln College of the James Millikin University. James Millikin, a wealthy Decatur livestock breeder, offered Lincoln University a $50,000 grant for a new building at the Lincoln campus if the school would turn over its charter. The $50,000 grant was on the condition that the citizens of Lincoln would raise $25,000 towards the new building project. The $25,000 was raised and the $50,000 grant was provided to the Lincoln campus.

In 1929, Lincoln became a two-year junior college, no longer offering four-year degrees as it had done since its inception. Many junior colleges were created in the 1920s and 1930s. The move helped the college through the financial problems of the Great Depression and World War II.

The Lincoln College campus experienced substantial growth following World War II. The college has seven dorms, numerous classroom buildings, a library, and a new building dubbed the Lincoln Center, which hosts a gymnasium, state of the art classrooms, and Lincoln Heritage Museum.

In 2015, Dr. David Gerlach was selected as the 22nd President of Lincoln College. Shortly after Dr. Gerlach's appointment, the Lincoln College Board of Trustees approved a plan to return Lincoln College to its roots as a full bachelor's degree-granting institution, while still retaining its associate degree programs. As of the 2018–2019 school year, about half of the full-time students on the Lincoln campus had declared majors in bachelor's degree programs, with associate degree students comprising the other half of the Lincoln campus student population.

In 2018, business programs at Lincoln College were consolidated under the new MacKinnon School of Business, named in honor of distinguished graduate and successful businessman Alexander "Sandy" MacKinnon.

Academics[]

Lincoln College is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission. In 2010, Lincoln College, Lincoln, Ill. campus, received Accreditation from the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools for their bachelor of arts degree in theater. In 2013, the campus began offering studies toward a bachelor of arts in Jazz Studies (Now Contemporary Jazz Studies). Additional bachelor's degrees have been added since. The college now offers more than a dozen undergraduate programs. Business Programs at Lincoln College are accredited by the International Accreditation Council for Business Education.

Locations[]

Lincoln campus[]

Nearly 1,000 students attend the Lincoln campus. Students come from about 25 of the states in the United States and several countries. The list of countries include: Australia, China, England, France, Japan, Norway, and Sweden. Approximately 10 percent of students are from urban settings, 30 percent are from rural areas, and 60 percent are from the suburbs. There are slightly more men in the student population than women. The student-faculty ratio is 16–1, and most classes contain only 16-20 students. There is a 75 percent rate of students graduating in two years. Also, 90 percent of those graduates will transfer to a four-year institution the next semester, where their achievements can match or exceed those that the students that have been there for the full four years.

Normal campus[]

Lincoln College-Normal opened in 1979 as an extension of the Lincoln campus. The Accelerated Bridge to Education program known as ABE offers non-traditional students the opportunity to complete their bachelor's degree in an accelerated format one night a week with supplemental online work. The ABE program has campuses in Normal, Lincoln, Oglesby at Illinois Valley Community College, and in Peoria at Illinois Central College. More than 500 students are enrolled in the ABE program. The average class size is 16, and the student-faculty ratio is 14:1. The number of males to females is nearly equal.

Student life[]

Residence halls[]

The Lincoln College campus has 6 residence halls on campus. These halls are Carroll Hall,[1] Heritage Hall South,[2] Heritage Hall West and North,[3] Hoyle Hall,[4] Olin-Sang Hall, and Lynx Village. These buildings are divided by style which include traditional, suite, and apartment suite.

Radio, television, and new media[]

WLNX is the campus student operated radio station serving the Lincoln community. The college also operates LCTV, the educational and local government channel available to residents on Channel 5 of Comcast's cable system.

Conservation biology[]

Campbell Creekside Outdoor Center is a 104-acre environmental education site. This was the location where a student of Lincoln College, Judd McCullum, found Illinois' largest mammoth fossil.[5]

Athletics[]

Lincoln College offers nearly two dozen men's and women's sports at the NAIA level including baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, swimming and diving, track and field, volleyball, and wrestling. The College began its first season in the four-year NAIA in 2018. Previously, Lincoln College was a member of the NJCAA and its conference was the Mid-West Athletic Conference, stemming from its many years as a junior college. Prior to that, Lincoln College was a member of the Illinois Intercollegiate Athletic Conference from 1910–1928.

As a junior college, the Lincoln College wrestling team produced numerous NJCAA All-Americans and the team often placed in top positions in the NJCAA Nationals including national champions in 1989 and 1991. Lincoln College is also a basketball powerhouse and has also won back to back Basketball National Championships in 2010 and 11. In 2018, the Lynx Volleyball Team won the Men's Division II National Championship in the NCVF National Collegiate Club Volleyball Championship. The Lincoln College swimming and diving teams have attracted a number of athletes in recent years who have represented their home countries in the Olympics. The school mascot is the Lynx.

The college plans to add men's and women's bowling to their intercollegiate sports offerings for the 2019–2020 season. The college will also add collaborative online gaming ("Esports") as an officially sponsored club sport.

Lincoln College announced they would be joining the Chicagoland Collegiate Athletic Conference in the 2020-21 academic year.

Lincoln Heritage Museum[]

Lincoln Heritage Museum began as the Lincoln Room at Lincoln College in 1941 with a large donation of Abraham lincoln artifacts from alumnus Judge Lawrence Stringer. Over time the collection grew with a notable donation coming from Robert Todd Lincoln Beckwith, the last descendant of the Lincoln family. As Lincoln College's collection expanded, the Lincoln Room transformed into the Lincoln College Museum within the McKinstry Library. By 2014, the museum had outgrown its space again and Lincoln Heritage Museum was formed in the newly constructed Lincoln Center building.

Lincoln Heritage Museum was ranked the 5th most astounding collegiate museum in the entire nation in 2019 and one of the 3o most amazing university museums in the world in 2003.[6] [7]


Notable alumni[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Carroll North and South". Lincoln College Housing. Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  2. ^ "Heritage South". Lincoln College Housing. Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  3. ^ "Heritage Hall North & West". Lincoln College Housing. Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  4. ^ "Hoyle Hall". Lincoln College Housing. Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  5. ^ "Creekside". Lincoln College. Retrieved 2019-10-22.
  6. ^ "30 of the Most Amazing University Museums". Best Colleges Online. 11 April 2013.
  7. ^ "51 Most Astounding College Museums". EDsmart. 6 September 2018.
  8. ^ "Matt Hughes UFC Bio". Retrieved 2014-01-01.

External links[]

Coordinates: 40°9′25.1″N 89°21′38.4″W / 40.156972°N 89.360667°W / 40.156972; -89.360667

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