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Tennessee Wesleyan University company history timeline

1857

Tennessee Wesleyan was founded in 1857 as Athens Female College.

1867

In 1867, shortly before Ulysses S. Grant became President of the United States, he was solicited by President John Spence to make a cash donation to the school and became recognized as one the first donors in the school.

1884

"If those students were judged by their zeal in applying to their studies and their ability to master them, and their ambition to qualify themselves for a successful and useful life, they would rank very high." From the diary of James A. Fowler, class of 1884.

1886

Upon the death of Grant, President Spence renamed the school Grant Memorial University on what would have been Grant’s 64 birthday, April 27, 1886.

In 1886, college president John F. Spence changed the name to Grant Memorial University in an attempt to receive financial support from Northern benefactors.

1889

In 1889, it merged with Chattanooga University to form United States Grant Memorial University (United States Grant University; United States being Grant's given names), becoming the consolidated university's Athens branch campus.

1906

Seventeen years later (1906), it was renamed the Athens School of the University of Chattanooga.

1957

Tennessee Wesleyan became a liberal arts college in 1957 when it began awarding bachelor's degrees.

2016

In February 2016, the school announced that they would change their name to Tennessee Wesleyan University, effective July 1, 2016.

2022

Story Recap for Baseball at Florida Memorial University on April 22, 2022 at 11 a.m.

Live Stats for Baseball at Georgia Gwinnett OR MidAmerica Nazarene on May 28, 2022 at 6 p.m.

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Founded
1857
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Headquarters
Athens, TN
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Tennessee Wesleyan University may also be known as or be related to TENNESSEE WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY and Tennessee Wesleyan University.