Motto | Sapientia Gemmis Melior |
---|---|
Type | Private two-year college |
Established | 1787 / 1814 |
President | Mark La Branche |
Administrative staff
|
158 |
Undergraduates | 750 |
Location | Louisburg, North Carolina, USA |
Campus |
Rural Main: 75 acres (30 ha) |
Nickname | Hurricanes |
Website | |
Main Building, Louisburg College
|
|
Location | Louisburg College campus, Louisburg, North Carolina |
Coordinates | 36°6′17″N 78°18′0″W / 36.10472°N 78.30000°WCoordinates: 36°6′17″N 78°18′0″W / 36.10472°N 78.30000°W |
Area | 6 acres (2.4 ha) |
Built | 1857 |
Built by | Jones, Albert Gamaliel |
Architectural style | Greek Revival |
NRHP Reference # | 78001955 |
Added to NRHP | December 8, 1978 |
Louisburg College is a private Methodist-affiliated two-year college located in Louisburg, North Carolina.
Louisburg College has its roots in two schools: Franklin Male Academy, which was chartered in 1787, re-chartered in 1802 but held its first recorded classes on January 1, 1805; and Louisburg Female College, which was founded in 1857, succeeding a previous institution, Louisburg Female Academy, founded in 1814.
Louisburg Female Academy opened its doors in 1815, under the direction of Harriet Partridge, making it one of the oldest institutions of higher education for women. From 1843-1856, Asher H. Ray and his wife Jane Curtis Ray were highly successful as principals of the female academy, which in the 1850s was called Louisburg Female Seminary. Among the courses offered by the seminary were history, botany, algebra, rhetoric, chemistry, geology, logic, French, Latin, Greek, guitar, and calisthenics. The respected reputation of the seminary contributed to a movement to establish a female college.
In 1855, the property of Louisburg Female Academy was transferred to the Louisburg Female College Company; the newly formed body, Louisburg Female College, opened its doors in 1857. A four-story, fifty-room brick Greek Revival-style building for the female college was constructed in 1857 on the west campus where the female academy building had formerly stood. Old Main, the central building of the Female Academy is still in use today as the administrative building of Louisburg College. Old Main was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. It is located in the Louisburg Historic District.
In August 1857, Louisburg Female College opened its doors under the management of Professor James P. Nelson. Course offerings included French, Spanish, Italian, piano, guitar, drawing, painting, and needlework. The female college continued to operate during the Civil War under presidents C.C. Andrews (1860–1861) and James Southgate, Jr. (1862–1865). After the war, about 500 Union soldiers camped in the college during May and June 1865.