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Young Harris College company history timeline

1886

Classes were held in a vacant storefront beginning in January 1886.

Explore the history of Young Harris College, which was established in 1886 by Rev.

Young Harris College started in 1886 as the McTyeire Institute with the purpose of providing the first and only educational opportunities to the residents of the isolated area in the Blue Ridge Mountains.

The school was founded in 1886 by Artemas Lester, a circuit-riding Methodist minister who wanted to provide the residents of the Appalachian Mountains with an education.

1887

In 1887, minister Artemus Lester asked him for financial help with a small school he’d established the year before in Towns County’s Brasstown Valley.

1888

In 1888, the name changed from McTyeire Institute to Young Harris Institute in appreciation of Judge Harris’s support of the school.

1889

In 1889, the Board of Trustees faced several challenges to move the growing school.

1894

The benefactor of one of Georgia’s premier liberal arts colleges died on April 28, 1894, Today in Georgia History.

1895

The school was later renamed Young Harris Institute and became Young Harris College in honor of its benefactor, as was the surrounding town in 1895.

1897

By 1897, the litigation over Young L. G. Harris’s will was resolved by the Georgia Supreme Court, and the College received $16,000 from his estate.

1911

A fire destroyed the college's main classroom building in 1911, but it was rebuilt by local townspeople and named Sharp Hall in honor of the college president at the time.

1931

In 1931, Young Harris College was accepted for accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC). However, almost immediately upon accreditation, YHC was placed on probation by SACS because of its lack of substantial endowment.

1941

In 1941, the College offered both a terminal two-year college diploma and a college prep diploma for those planning to continue at the baccalaureate level.

1951

Finally, due to concerted fundraising by the Board of Trustees, particularly Scott Appleby, the endowment was considered large enough and the probation lifted in 1951.

2007

In April 2007, the Board of Trustees charged incoming president Cathy Cox to grow the College to four-year status.

2008

The Rollins Campus Center was one of three projects approved for construction in 2008.

2009

Construction began on April 24, 2009, on a new, $15 million, 57,000 sq ft (5,300 m) Recreation and Fitness Center.

Enotah Hall, a new residence facility for 200 students, opened in August 2009 between Manget Hall and Rollins Hall.

2010

In February 2010, Young Harris' accreditation was expanded to include communication studies, history, outdoor leadership, theatre, and musical theatre in the list of sanctioned bachelor's programs.

The lower level houses locker rooms and offices for coaches and staff. It opened in late July, 2010 with a tour by college president Cathy Cox.

Following completion of the Rec Center in 2010, a new student residence area, The Village, for 248 students was constructed in 14 apartment buildings where a cluster of the school's tennis courts had been previously located.

2013

Winner of two 2013 Emmy Awards from the Southeast Chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences

2019

© 2019 Zell & Shirley Miller Library, Young Harris College Debra March

Since that time, the College has grown to offer more than 25 baccalaureate degree programs across disciplines and added a Master of Arts in Teaching program in 2019.

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Founded
1886
Company founded
Headquarters
Young Harris, GA
Company headquarter
Founders
Mr. William B. Jones,Mrs. Julie D. Salisbury
Company founders
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