Fisk University
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Established | 1866 |
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Type | Private |
President | Hazel R. O'Leary |
Undergraduates | 850 |
Location | Nashville, Tennessee, USA |
Campus | Urban, 42 acres |
Colors | Gold and Blue |
Nickname | Bulldogs |
Website | www.fisk.edu |
Fisk University is a historically black university in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. It was established by John Ogden, Reverend Erastus Milo Cravath and Reverend Edward P. Smith and named in honor of General Clinton B. Fisk of the Tennessee Freedmen's Bureau. Fisk opened to classes on January 9, 1866. Fisk heralded its first African American president with the arrival of Charles Spurgeon Johnson in 1947. Johnson was a premier sociologist, a scholar who had been the editor of Opportunity magazine, a noted periodical of the Harlem Renaissance. Fisk University is currently under the direction of its 14th president, the Honorable Hazel O'Leary, former Secretary of Energy under President William Jefferson Clinton. She is the second female president of the university.
Fisk University features the world-famous Fisk Jubilee Singers, originally a group of traveling students who set out from Nashville to earn enough money to save the school and raise sufficient funds to build the first permanent structure in the country solely built for the education of newly-freed slaves, the renowned and recently-restored Jubilee Hall. It is the oldest, and most distinctive, structure of Victorian architecture on the 40 acre (160,000 m²) Fisk campus.
Among many other notable firsts, Fisk University was the first historically black college or university to earn its Phi Beta Kappa Charter in 1952.
[edit] Notable alumni
- Kaye George Roberts, orchestral conductor
- Joyce Bolden, first African-American woman to serve on the Commission for Accreditation of the National Association of Schools of Music
- Ted Jarrett, R&B recording artist and producer
- Aaron Douglas, painter, illustrator, muralist
- W.E.B. DuBois, sociologist, scholar, first Black to earn a Ph.D. from Harvard
- John Hope Franklin, historian, professor, scholar, author of landmark text, From Slavery to Freedom, graduate of the class of 1935
- Nikki Giovanni, poet, author, professor, scholar
- Alma Powell, wife of Gen. Colin Powell
- Kym Whitley, actress, comedienne
- Hortense Canady, past national president of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated
- Alcee Hastings, U.S. Congressman and former U.S. district court judge
- Roland Hayes, concert singer
- James Weldon Johnson, author, poet and civil rights activist, author of the "Negro National Anthem" "Lift Ev'ry Voice and Sing"
- Louis George Gregory, Hand of the Cause in the Bahá'í Faith
- John Lewis, politician, civil rights activist, former President of SNCC
[edit] External links
Part of the Tom Joyner Foundation for HBCUs.