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Emerson College

Emerson College
Emerson College Shield-trans.png
The Shield of Emerson College
Former names
Emerson College of Oratory (1890–1939); Monroe Conservatory of Oratory (1881); Boston Conservatory of Elocution, Oratory, and Dramatic Art (1880)
Motto Expression Necessary to Evolution
Type Private
Established 1880
Endowment $146 million
President M. Lee Pelton
Academic staff
576
Undergraduates 3,453
Postgraduates 837
Location Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
42°21′06″N 71°03′58″W / 42.3518°N 71.0660°W / 42.3518; -71.0660
Campus Urban
Colors Royal Purple     
Nickname Lions
Affiliations ProArts Consortium, New England Association of Schools and Colleges
Website www.emerson.edu

Emerson College is located in downtown Boston, Massachusetts, United States. Founded in 1880 by Charles Wesley Emerson as a "school of oratory", Emerson is "the only comprehensive college or university in America dedicated exclusively to communication and the arts in a liberal arts context". Offering more than three dozen degree programs in the area of Arts and Communication, the college is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges. Located in Boston's Washington Street Theatre District on the edge of the Boston Common, the school also maintains buildings in Los Angeles and the town of Well, The Netherlands.

Emerson College has been named the winner of the Environmental Protection Agency’s College and University Green Power Challenge for the Great Northeast Athletic Conference for 2012–2013.

Charles Wesley Emerson founded the Boston Conservatory of Elocution, Oratory, and Dramatic Art in 1880, a year after Boston University closed its School of Oratory. Classes were held at Pemberton Square in Boston. Ten students enrolled in the conservatory's first class. The following year, the conservatory changed its name to the "Monroe Conservatory of Oratory", in honor of Charles Emerson's teacher at Boston University's School of Oratory, Professor Lewis B. Monroe. In 1890, the name changed again to "Emerson College of Oratory" and was later shortened to Emerson College in 1939.


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