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Georgetown College (Kentucky)

Georgetown College
Georgetown College seal.png
Motto Vim Promovet Insitiam (Latin)
Motto in English
"[Learning] promotes one's innate power" – from Horace, Ode 4.4
Type Private Liberal Arts
Established 1829
President M. Dwaine Greene, Ph.D.
Academic staff
117
Undergraduates 880
Postgraduates 622
Location Georgetown, KY, U.S.
38°12′25″N 84°33′14″W / 38.207°N 84.554°W / 38.207; -84.554Coordinates: 38°12′25″N 84°33′14″W / 38.207°N 84.554°W / 38.207; -84.554
Campus Suburban, 104 acres
Athletics 22 varsity teams
Colors Black and Orange
         
Mascot Tigers
Affiliations Mid-South Conference
Website georgetowncollege.edu
Georgetown College logo.png

Georgetown College is a small, private, Christian liberal arts college located in Georgetown, Kentucky, United States. Chartered in 1829, Georgetown College was the first Baptist college west of the Allegheny Mountains. With a low student-to-faculty ratio of 13-to-1, the college offers many undergraduate degrees and a Master of Arts in Education.

Georgetown College is located in the Bluegrass region of Central Kentucky, 12 miles north of Lexington, KY, approximately 70 miles east of Louisville, KY, and 75 miles south of Cincinnati, Ohio.

Georgetown College traces its roots to Royal Springs Academy, a classical school founded by Baptist minister Elijah Craig in Georgetown in 1787. The institution was renamed Rittenhouse Academy in 1798 as part of a land grant agreement, and was led by Barton Stone, a co-founder of the Stone Campbell Movement, 1816–19. The academy declined and closed by 1829.

In 1829, the Kentucky General Assembly chartered the Kentucky Baptist Education Society with the purpose of establishing a Baptist college in the state. Twenty-four trustees under the leadership of Silas Noel selected the town of Georgetown as the site for the new school. Georgetown was selected because the community agreed to raise $20,000 and to donate the assets of the recently closed Rittenhouse Academy.

Georgetown College overcame numerous difficulties in its early years. The first president hired for the college in 1829, William D. Staughton, died before assuming his duties. The second president, Rev. Joel Smith Bacon, stayed two years (1830–1832), fighting court cases to release funding for the college before leaving out of frustration. The funds were not released until 1836, when Benjamin Franklin Farnsworth became the third president hired. By then there was a power struggle in progress; Farnsworth had been hired by the Baptists to frustrate the Campbellites who were attempting to take control of the college. After the Campbellites founded a rival college only blocks away, Farnsworth found his attempts to build up Georgetown College stymied, and resigned in 1837.


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