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Eastern Nazarene

Eastern Nazarene College
ENCseal.png
Seal of the Eastern Nazarene College
Former names
Pentecostal Collegiate
Institute (1900-1918)
Motto Via, Veritas, Vita
Motto in English
"The Way, the Truth,
and the Life"
Type Private
Established September 25, 1900 (PCI)
June 14, 1918 (ENC)
Affiliation Nazarene
Endowment US $11,015,937
President Dan Boone
Provost Timothy T. Wooster
Students 1,075
Undergraduates 927
Postgraduates 148
Location Quincy, Massachusetts, US
42°16′15.5634″N 71°0′42.8076″W / 42.270989833°N 71.011891000°W / 42.270989833; -71.011891000Coordinates: 42°16′15.5634″N 71°0′42.8076″W / 42.270989833°N 71.011891000°W / 42.270989833; -71.011891000
Campus Urban/Suburban
27 acres (109,265.1 m2)
Colors Red & White         
Athletics ECAC, NCAA (CCC)
Nickname Lions
Affiliations AACU, CCCU, CIC,
NAICU, NEASC
Sports Baseball, Basketball,
Cross-Country, Soccer,
Softball, Tennis, Volleyball
Website www.enc.edu
ENCshieldandbanner.png
The College Crest

The Eastern Nazarene College (ENC) is a private, coeducational college of the liberal arts and sciences in Quincy, Massachusetts, near Boston, in the New England region of the United States. It is known for its religious affiliation, liberal arts core curriculum, and its science and religion education. Its academic programs are primarily undergraduate, with some professional graduate education offered.

The residential campus, in Wollaston Park near Quincy Bay, is served by the Wollaston MBTA station, and was once the summer home of Boston mayor Josiah Quincy, Jr. Established as a holiness college in Saratoga Springs, New York, in 1900, it was relocated to Massachusetts in 1919.

On September 25, 1900, several come-outer Methodist clergy and laymen affiliated with the 19th-century Holiness movement opened a co-educational collegiate institute at the Garden View House in Saratoga Springs, New York. In a time when pentecostal did not hold the same meaning as it does today, but rather served as a synonym for holiness, it was named the Pentecostal Collegiate Institute (PCI) and established for the purpose of providing liberal education and ministry training in a preparatory academy, four-year college, and theological seminary. PCI operated under the auspices of the Association of Pentecostal Churches of America (APCA), a loose association of Wesleyan-holiness churches from eastern Canada down to the Middle Atlantic, and its own board of education, with Lyman C. Pettit as its first president. PCI was also accredited by the New York State Education Department's Board of Regents of the University of the State of New York and was given state funding because a public school did not exist there at the time. In 1901, the institute changed locations in Saratoga Springs, from the Garden View House to the former Kenmore Hotel.


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