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    • Bathsheba A. Benedict

      • Founded in 1870 by a woman, Bathsheba A. Benedict, Benedict College is a private co-educational liberal arts institution with over 1,700 students enrolled in its 26 baccalaureate degree programs.
      benedict.edu › about-benedict › history
  1. Benedict College, originally Benedict Institute, was founded 152 years ago under the auspices of the American Baptist Home Mission Society. As Benedict’s first philanthropist, Mrs. Benedict of Pawtucket, Rhode Island, provided $13,000 towards the purchase of an 80-acre plantation near Columbia, South Carolina as the site for a new school for ...

    • A Brief History

      Benedict College, originally Benedict Institute, was founded...

    • About

      Founded in 1870 by a woman, Bathsheba A. Benedict, Benedict...

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  3. Benedict College is a private historically black college in Columbia, South Carolina, United States. Founded in 1870 by northern Baptists, it was originally a teachers' college. It has since expanded to offer majors in many disciplines across the liberal arts.

  4. Benedict College, originally Benedict Institute, was founded in 1870 under the auspices of the American Baptist Home Mission Society. As Benedict’s first philanthropist, Mrs. Bathsheba Benedict of Pawtucket, Rhode Island, provided $13,000 towards the purchase of an 80-acre plantation near Columbia, South Carolina as the site for a new school ...

  5. Founded in 1870 by a woman, Bathsheba A. Benedict, Benedict College is a private co-educational liberal arts institution with over 1,700 students enrolled in its 26 baccalaureate degree programs and 2 masters degree programs.

  6. Dec 19, 2009 · Benedict College was founded in 1870 by Rhode Island native Mrs. Bathsheba Benedict and the Baptist Home Mission. Its long-term goal was to educate emancipated African Americans and produce citizens with “powers for good in society.”

  7. Feb 24, 2022 · Founded in 1870 by Bathsheba Benedict, an abolitionist from Rhode Island, the idea to establish a college for recently emancipated slaves was her husband's, Hunter said.

  8. May 17, 2016 · The Reverend John J. Starks, an 1891 graduate of Benedict, began a succession of African American leaders of the college. Throughout the twentieth century, Benedict College expanded its campus, its curriculum, its student body, and its significance to the Columbia region and beyond.

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