*** Welcome to piglix ***

Lackawanna College

Lackawanna College
Lackawanna College seal.png
Former names
Lackawanna Junior College, Scranton Business College
Type Private
Established 1894
President Col. Mark Volk
Students 1,400
Location Scranton, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Campus Urban
Colors Navy, Gray, and White
Sports Baseball, basketball, football, golf, soccer, softball, tennis, volleyball
Nickname Falcons
Affiliations National Junior College Athletic Association
Website http://www.lackawanna.edu

Lackawanna College (formerly Lackawanna Junior College, originally Scranton Business College) is a private college in Scranton, Pennsylvania, with satellite centers in the towns of Hazleton, Hawley, Towanda, and New Milford.

The college began as a proprietary institution with a full academic program under the direction of H.D. Buck and A.R. Whitmore. John H. Seeley, a noted regional educator, purchased it in 1912. Seeley, who also owned the Lackawanna Business College, merged his two institutions into the Scranton Lackawanna Business College and built a new campus in the city's downtown.

The word "business" was eventually dropped from the school's name because it was judged to be too restrictive, and civil service courses were added to prepare students for governmental positions. The college met with continued success because of its ability to change with the times. With the coming of World War II, the school made a concerted effort to train women for positions in business and industry. After the war, the college adapted its programs once more to meet the needs of returning veterans.

In 1957, the College was incorporated as a non-profit institution under a self-perpetuating Board of Trustees. Chartered as Lackawanna Junior College, course offerings were expanded to include the humanities and the social and behavioral sciences. The Pennsylvania Department of Education granted Lackawanna the right to award associate degrees. The college officially changed its name to Lackawanna College in 2001.

The College was donated to The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania by the Seeley Family, effective 1974 upon the retirement of Hoyle G. Seeley (John H. Seeley's Son, President and Chairman of the board until his Death in 1976). In 1982, it acquired the former Bishop Klonowski High School as a campus. The College purchased the former Scranton Central High School located at 501 Vine Street and refurbished the then-vacant building. It was named Angeli Hall in 2012, after former College president Raymond Angeli.

On Sept. 3, 2001, in conjunction with its 107th anniversary, the College removed the word "junior" from its name.

The main campus in Scranton now includes five other operational buildings: dormitories McKinnie Hall (named for former Lackawanna College and current NFL football player Bryant McKinnie, the first former athlete to be selected in the first round of the NFL Draft), Seeley Hall, and Tobin Hall; Healey Academic Center; and the Student Union (housed in the city's former Catholic Youth Center). A pair of buildings, including the former Scranton Center, were purchased in July 2014 for future expansions of Allied Health, Culinary Arts, and other academic programs.


...
Wikipedia

...