Three Virginia Community Colleges to Change Their Names

Patrick Henry

Three Virginia Community Colleges have a green light to change their names and two other colleges are being directed to consider doing likewise after the State Board for Community Colleges voted unanimously to amend its community college naming policy.

In updating its college naming policy, the board agreed college names “should reflect the values of inclusive and accessible education articulated in the VCCS mission statement, with special emphasis on diversity, equity, and opportunity, and be relevant to the students it seeks to serve and to the geography of its service region.”

Accordingly, the board unanimously approved the recommendations of the local college boards of John Tyler, Lord Fairfax, and Thomas Nelson Community Colleges to remove their existing names and return with recommendations of what their new names should be.

Further, the board unanimously voted to direct Patrick Henry Community College and Dabney S. Lancaster Community College leaders and local boards to reconsider their previous decision to retain their college’s name following the state policy change.

Patrick Henry, most known for his 1775 declaration, “Give me liberty, or give me death,” was a slaveowner. He served two terms as governor of Virginia. Dabney S. Lancaster became the state superintendent of public instruction in 1941. After the Supreme Court’s 1954 decision in Brown v. Board of Education, Lancaster was quoted as saying, “We’ll fight it from the housetops, from the street corners, in every possible way. We are going to maintain our way of life.”

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Get the JBHE Weekly Bulletin

Receive our weekly email newsletter delivered to your inbox

Latest News

Floyd L. Wormley, Jr. Appointed Provost of Texas Christian University

“TCU has been my home for nearly six years, and I am thrilled to be able to build upon the academic excellence, important scholarship and creative activity already in progress," said Dr. Wormley.

First-Year Law School Enrollments: Black Women Up, Black Men Down

in the fall of 2024, Black students made up 7.7 percent of all first-year students at law schools in the United States. Among the 2024 cohort of 3,060 entering Black students, 2,099 were women. Thus, women made up nearly 69 percent of all Black first-year law students.

Marlin Nabors Named Dean of Students at the University of Pittsburgh

With over two decades of experience in higher education administration, Nabors comes to the University og Pittsburgh from Endicott College in Massachusetts, where he served as dean of students for four years.

Meharry Medical College and the University of Pennsylvania Establish Joint MD/PhD Program

Cynthia Chude has been named the inaugural Escare-Kingston Scholar at Meharry Medical College and the University of Pennsylvania. She will simultaneously pursue a medical degree at Meharry and a Ph.D. in health care management at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.

Featured Jobs