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Edward Waters Tigers football

Edward Waters College
EWClogo.PNG
Motto in English
Academic, Spiritual, Physical
Type Private,HBCU
Established 1866 (Institute)
1883 (High School)
1955 (Junior College)
1979 (College)
Affiliation African Methodist Episcopal Church
Endowment $1.8 million
President Nathaniel "Nat" Glover, Jr.
Students 800
Location Jacksonville, Florida, United States
30°20′43″N 81°41′05″W / 30.3453°N 81.6847°W / 30.3453; -81.6847Coordinates: 30°20′43″N 81°41′05″W / 30.3453°N 81.6847°W / 30.3453; -81.6847
Campus Urban, 23 acres
Colors Purple, Orange and White
              
Athletics National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics
Nickname Tigers and Lady Tigers
Affiliations Gulf Coast Athletic Conference; The Sun Conference (Football-Only)
Website www.ewc.edu
Centennial Hall
Jax FL Centennial Hall01.jpg
Edward Waters College is located in Florida
Edward Waters College
Edward Waters College is located in the US
Edward Waters College
Location 1658 Kings Rd., Jacksonville, Florida
Coordinates 30°20′42″N 81°41′04″W / 30.3450°N 81.6844°W / 30.3450; -81.6844
Area less than one acre
Built 1916
Architect Howells & Stokes
NRHP Reference # 76000589
Added to NRHP May 4, 1976

Edward Waters College is a private college located in Jacksonville, Florida. It was founded in 1866 to educate freed former slaves and is the oldest historically black college in Florida. It is affiliated with the African Methodist Episcopal Church, and is part of the Independent Colleges and Universities of Florida. Its current president is Nat Glover, the former Sheriff of Jacksonville.

The first African Methodist Episcopal (AME) pastor in the state, William G. Steward, originally named the college Brown Theological Institute. Charles H. Pearce was also involved in establishing an educational institution for the church.

The school went through some financial difficulties and closed for much of the 1870s. It reopened in 1883 as "East Florida Conference High School”, then changed to “East Florida Scientific and Divinity High School”. Over the next ten years, the curriculum was expanded and the school was renamed for the third bishop of the AME Church, Edward Waters.

The original Edward Waters College campus was destroyed by the Great Fire of 1901, but by 1904 new land was obtained and work was started on the new facility. Edward Waters was accredited as a junior college in 1955 under President William B. Stewart and five years later had a restored four-year curriculum. Beginning in 1979 the school was accredited as a four-year institution by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) and started awarding bachelor's degrees.

In 2004, Edward Waters College submitted documents to SACS to support their request for reaccreditation. A Florida Times-Union investigation in October discovered that the EWC documents plagiarized sections of text and statistics from a similar Alabama A&M University document. The Commission on Colleges voted to drop EWC from membership in SACS, thus revoking the school's accreditation, but the school appealed. A hearing was held in Atlanta during February 2005, and the appeal by Edward Waters College was denied. The school then filed a lawsuit seeking an injunction during litigation, which a federal judge granted. The judge stated that the college could show they were denied due process, and appointed two mediators. In June, the college and SACS agreed to a settlement that allowed the school to remain accredited while re-filing their accreditation documentation. The college's accreditation was reaffirmed in 2006.


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