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Hinds Community College company history timeline

1917

Our history began in September 1917 when Hinds County Agricultural High School opened in the small town of Raymond.

The experiment proved successful, and by 1917 junior colleges had been established in Illinois, California, Texas, Iowa, and several other states.

1921

Pearl River was the first agricultural high school to offer college courses in Mississippi (1921). Courtesy Pearl River Community College.

1922

In 1922, Zeller introduced a bill into the Mississippi Senate that quickly became law.

The first year of junior college work was offered during the 1922-23 school session and attracted a freshman enrollment of 30 students.

1923

34: Consolidated Schools in Mississippi.” Mississippi State Department of Education, 1923.

1928

East Central Community College in Decatur, Mississippi, was established in 1928.

At the beginning of 1928, ten Mississippi agricultural high schools were offering at least one year of college courses and two more were scheduled to do so in the fall of that year.

After 1928 the Mississippi junior college system grew rapidly.

1937

Notably, the main campuses of the colleges are located in small towns instead of cities, with the lone exception of Meridian Community College, which, when founded in 1937, was also the only school that did not begin as an agricultural high school.

1982

Stokes remained president until the Utica/Hinds merger in 1982.

In 1982, the Jackson Campus-Nursing/Allied Health Center at 1750 Chadwick Drive was added to the existing Jackson Branch on Sunset Drive to form a comprehensive Jackson Campus.

1983

The year 1983 saw Hinds open its Pearl-Rankin Vocational/Career Center to offer courses to Rankin County high school students.

1987

To reflect its commitment to meet the educational needs of everyone in the Hinds district, Hinds Junior College changed its name to Hinds Community College in 1987.

1988

Growth in business and industry saw the institution incorporate what is now the Division of Economic Development and Training in 1988 to provide customized training and services for businesses, industries, government agencies and community organizations.

1996

In 1996, the Eagle Ridge Conference Center opened on the Raymond Campus.

2001

The college's Board of Trustees voted in 2001 to rename the building Cain-Cochran Hall, honoring the late W.H. and Emma Grace Cochran who were longtime public educators in the state and had more than 85 years between them in education.

2003

The National Endowment of Humanities provided funding for the museum, an idea that originated in 2003.

2007

A Fine Arts Complex serving both students and the community opened in 2007.

The Raymond Campus, where the college's history began, added a modern Wellness Complex in 2007 for students, employees and the community.

2009

Slated to be finished during the 2009-10 school year are the new band hall and D.G. "Sonny" Fountain Hall for administrative offices, including recruiting and Hinds Connection.

2011

Clifford Nelson, Director Emeritus of Counseling, 2011

2012

Jimmy Smith, Vice President Emeritus, Rankin Campus, 2012

2014

Joann Cooper, Professor Emeritus of Information Systems Technology, 2014

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Founded
1917
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Headquarters
Raymond, MS
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Hinds Community College may also be known as or be related to Hinds Community College and Hinds Community College District Public Improvement Corporation (the Corporation).