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  2. The Clemson story | History. Clemson was founded in 1889 through a bequest from Thomas Green Clemson, a Philadelphia-born, European-educated engineer, musician and artist who married John C. Calhoun’s daughter, Anna Maria, and eventually settled at her family plantation in South Carolina.

    • Past Presidents

      Edwin B. Craighead (1893-1897) was the first president under...

    • History of Clemson

      In 2015 the Clemson Board of Trustees established a task...

    • John C. Calhoun

      Clyde N. Wilson, ed. The Essential Calhoun: Selections from...

    • Thomas Green Clemson

      Thomas Green Clemson, the University’s founder and namesake,...

    • Fort Hill

      The enslaved African-Americans, whose story of resistance...

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  4. Beginnings. Fort Hill, photographed in 1887, was the home of John C. Calhoun and later Thomas Green Clemson and is at the center of the university campus.

  5. Thomas Green Clemson, the University’s founder and namesake, was as complex as the times in which he lived. In his 80 years, he achieved fame as a diplomat, an agriculturalist and a mining engineer.

    • Thomas Green Clemson
    • Anna Maria Calhoun Clemson
    • John Caldwell Calhoun
    • Floride Bonneau Colhoun Calhoun
    • Richard Wright Simpson
    • Benjamin Ryan Tillman

    The University’s founder and namesake, was a Philadelphia-born, European-educated engineer who married John C. Calhoun’s daughter, Anna, and settled at her family estate in South Carolina. Clemson was as complex as the times in which he lived: He was a diplomat, mining engineer and agriculturalist whose hobbies included music, art and the classics....

    Anna inherited her mother’s style and grace and her father’s interest in politics. She was well educated, culminating her studies at the South Carolina Female Collegiate Institute, an academically rigorous women’s college. As the wife of Thomas Green Clemson, Anna fulfilled the roles of diplomat’s spouse, plantation mistress, mother and confidant, ...

    Calhoun held many high offices, including U.S. Vice President twice, during a political career that spanned approximately 40 years and included service in both houses of Congress and as Secretary of War and Secretary of State. He was one of the most powerful and influential statesmen in U.S. history, and his speeches and writings articulated econom...

    Floride was a prominent woman even before she married career politician John C. Calhoun in 1811. She was the daughter of John Ewing Colhoun Sr., a Revolutionary War soldier and aid-de-camp to his brother-in-law, General Andrew Pickens. Colhoun was a U.S. Senator and Lowcountry plantation owner who purchased land in the Upstate that would eventually...

    A Pendleton-born farmer, lawyer, legislator and Confederate soldier, Simpson became a close friend and confidante of Thomas Green Clemson in his later years. In his capacity as Clemson’s attorney, he authored and served as executor of Clemson’s Last Will and Testament, lobbied vigorously for its acceptance in the state legislature and defended it i...

    Tillman was a powerful politician who served as Governor and U.S. Senator and was one of the original seven trustees named in the will of Thomas Green Clemson. A successful farmer, he embraced the idea of an agricultural college in the Upstate. Tillman's contributions to Clemson’s founding are significant, but his efforts to energize rural white vo...

  6. Clemson University is a public institution that was founded in 1889. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 22,566 (fall 2022), its setting is rural, and the campus size is 17,000 acres.

    • 105 Sikes Hall, Clemson, 29634, SC
    • 086465 63311
  7. Thomas Green Clemson (July 1, 1807 – April 6, 1888) was an American politician and statesman, serving as Chargés d'Affaires to Belgium, and United States Superintendent of Agriculture. He served in the Confederate Army and founded Clemson University in South Carolina. Historians have called Clemson "a quintessential nineteenth-century ...

  8. Jul 22, 2024 · The state established the Clemson Agricultural College the following year, and instruction began in 1893. At the outset the college was a military school and open to men only. In 1955 the school changed its status, becoming a civilian and coeducational institution. It gained university status in 1964.

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