Former names
|
Mt. Vernon Community College |
---|---|
Motto | "Our Students' Success, is Our Own Success" |
Type | Public, 2 year Community College |
Established | 1955 |
Endowment | $4,927,997 |
President | Terry Wilkerson, M.S., President |
Undergraduates | 2295 |
Other students
|
3014+ (dual-credit) |
Location | Ina, IL, USA |
Campus | Rural, 350 acres (1.4 km2) |
Newspaper | RLC Times |
Colours | Red White Black |
Athletics | 8 Varsity Teams Great Rivers Athletic Conference NCJAA Division II |
Nickname | Warriors |
Affiliations | Illinois Community College System |
Website | http://www.rlc.edu/ |
Rend Lake College (RLC), located in Ina, Illinois, is one of 48 two-year, open-admission colleges of the Illinois Community College System (ICCS), organized under the Illinois Public Community College Act.
Rend Lake College was founded in 1955 as Mt. Vernon Community College to allow students from High School District No. 201 the opportunity to receive post-secondary education similar to university curriculum. Authorized by the Illinois General Assembly and signed by Illinois Governor Otto Kerner, Jr. in 1961, the legislation enacted created the Illinois Board of Higher Education (IBHE). The IBHE was tasked by statute with formulating a Master Plan for Higher Education in the state of Illinois. In July 1964 the higher education master plan was published by the IBHE, which led to the Junior College Act of 1965. Soon thereafter, the institution was officially renamed Rend Lake College when it was organized December 20, 1966.
The Mt. Vernon Township High School and its faculty served as the initial facilities for the college when it began in 1967. The college began with a staff of 29 full-time and eight part-time faculty members, two full-time administrators and a librarian. Soon after its organization, the RLC Board of Trustees selected a 350-acre (1.4 km2) site near Ina, Illinois, located between Interstate 57 and Rend Lake, and began planning a new campus. Voters approved a bond issue of $3.1 million in 1967, to provide for the districts local share of the $9.5 million total cost. Groundbreaking ceremonies for construction were held March 27, 1969, coinciding with the day the college received word of its first North Central Association of Colleges and Schools accreditation.