Sullins Academy
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Sullins College was a former Methodist, female,
junior college A junior college (sometimes referred to colloquially as a juco, JuCo or JC) is a post-secondary educational institution offering vocational training designed to prepare students for either skilled trades and technical occupations and workers in su ...
in Bristol, Virginia, United States, founded about 1868 and named for David Sullins, a Methodist minister. It ceased operations after the class of 1976 graduated.


History

The institution was founded in 1870, and, in 1873, it became affiliated with the
Methodist Church Methodism, also called the Methodist movement, is a group of historically related Christian denomination, denominations of Protestantism, Protestant Christianity whose origins, doctrine and practice derive from the life and teachings of John W ...
. It began as a high school and junior college. Its first location was in downtown Bristol. The entire building burned during Christmas vacation in late December 1915, and the Methodist Church decided not to rebuild. Some of the residents of Bristol prevailed upon William E. Martin, a Methodist pastor in Alabama who earlier had been president of Sullins, to return to Bristol and reopen the school. He did and the school was rebuilt in an entirely new location in a residential area of Bristol, occupying an eminence overlooking the city. No longer a Methodist institution, Martin operated it as a proprietary women's school controlled by his family. It attracted a clientele from among wealthy families throughout the Southeast looking for a junior college with the prestige of being in Virginia. The new facility opened in September 1917. In the 1930s, Martin opened a subsidiary institution, Arlington Hall, in the Virginia outskirts of Washington, D.C. During World War II, Arlington Hall was closed, and the facilities came under the control of the federal government, which operated it as an American Bletchley Park—a super secret facility where enemy radio messages were carefully decoded. The facility is still a government enterprise. Sullins College in Bristol remained under the control of the Martin family until the 1960s, when they passed it to an independent board of trustees. The junior college celebrated its centennial in 1970. The college remained in operation and additional buildings were constructed. However, by the 1970s, women’s colleges were no longer as fashionable as they had once been, and as a two-year college, Sullins was particularly vulnerable to changing times. A peak enrollment of almost 400 in 1968 decreased rapidly so that by the fall of 1972 there were only 102 freshmen from 30 states and five foreign countries. Facing a million-dollar debt in February 1975 and with inadequate enrollment, the trustees offered the school to the state of Virginia in exchange for the state assuming the school's debt. The state Council of Higher Education recommended against the acquisition, and the governor declined the offer in late October 1975. In early 1976, the school was valued at $16 million and the campus comprised with 14 buildings in addition to the Camp Sequyoa. In April 1976, the board of trustees reached an agreement with the city to transfer the school to the city's school system to operate as a coeducational institution. The city would assume the school's $1.2 million debt, keep the name of the college and use the property only for educational purposes. The agreement with the city failed and following the graduation of the 1976 class, Sullins College closed in July. No alternative owner for the college developed. The property eventually passed to the United Coal Company, now known simply as the United Company, an investment firm. King University, in Bristol, Tennessee, is the custodian of the Sullins College records and maintains an active relationship with alumnae of the institution."Sullins CollegeSullins News,"
''King University''. October 29, 2015. Accessed August 29, 2016.


Student life

For most of its existence the college assumed responsibility for the behavior of its students under the operation of '' in loco parentis''. This was typified in 1911 by the school's expelling two girls who went for a ride in a car with two boys from the nearby King College. The girls were being held for their parents to come get them, when they eloped with the two boys. This resulted in the college officials and police pursuing the couples into Tennessee. The pursuit failed to apprehend the girls as the pursuers found them in Hawkins County, Tennessee a few minutes after the couples were married. There was discussion about criminal charges for the two boys involved. The school newspaper was the ''Reflector''.' A chapter of Phi Theta Kappa plus several student clubs operated on the campus. The school yearbook was the ''Sullins Sampler''. In 1946, the Sampler placed third for the Methodist Award among more than 300 schools competing in a competition overseen by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. The graduating class of 1955 donated a group of five "Peter Pan" statues that were placed around a pool on the campus. The school operated Camp Sequoya on South Holston Lake.


Presidents

*David Sullins (1870–1915) *William E. Martin (1916–) *William T. Martin (in 1956) *Claudius Pritchard (in 1972–1976)


Sullins Academy

In 1966, Emmanuel Episcopal Church, using the resources from Highland Hill Day School, opened a kindergarten through second grade school, Episcopal Day School, in the church building. The school added grades until it became a K-8 school. In the process, it ran out of space at the church building. After the college closed in 1976, the school moved its operation to the campus' Martin Hall in the summer of 1977 taking the name Sullins Academy to better identify its non-sectarian nature. The academy remained there until 1999 when it moved to a newly constructed facility on in Bristol, Virginia.


Notable alumni

*
Linda Garrou Linda Garrou (January 17, 1943 – March 19, 2022) was a Democratic member of the North Carolina General Assembly representing the state's thirty-second Senate district since 1999 until 2012. Her district includes constituents in Forsyth coun ...
– member of the
North Carolina General Assembly The North Carolina General Assembly is the Bicameralism, bicameral legislature of the Government of North Carolina, State government of North Carolina. The legislature consists of two chambers: the North Carolina Senate, Senate and the North Ca ...
*
Judy Onofrio Judy Onofrio is an American artist who lives and works in Rochester, Minnesota, United States. Career Born in New London, Connecticut, Onofrio studied business law and economics at Sullins College in Bristol, Virginia. She moved to Minnesota in ...
– Minnesota-based contemporary artist *
Katharine Smith Reynolds Katharine Smith Reynolds (November 17, 1880 – May 23, 1924), later Katharine Smith Johnston, was the wife of tobacco tycoon R. J. Reynolds and a philanthropist who designed the Reynolda House estate. Early life Katharine Smith was born in Mo ...
– philanthropist and builder of
Reynolda House The Reynolda House Museum of American Art displays a premiere collection of United States, American art ranging from the colonial period to the present. Built in 1917 by Katharine Smith Reynolds and her husband R. J. Reynolds, founder of the R. J ...
*
Marion Rice Marion Burbank Stevens Rice (September 9, 1904 – April 12, 1995) was an American modern dance choreographer, dance teacher and producer. Early life Rice was born in Hingham, Massachusetts. She studied ballet at Sullins College. She settled in F ...
– American modern dance choreographer, teacher, and producer * Lena Springs – Chair of Credentials Committee of
Democratic National Committee The Democratic National Committee (DNC) is the governing body of the United States Democratic Party. The committee coordinates strategy to support Democratic Party candidates throughout the country for local, state, and national office, as well a ...
and first woman to be nominated for Vice President of the United States at a national party convention


Notes

*, 1970, 28p. {{Colleges and universities in Virginia Defunct private universities and colleges in Virginia Former women's universities and colleges in the United States Rebuilt buildings and structures in Virginia Educational institutions established in 1870 Buildings and structures in Bristol, Virginia Burned buildings and structures in the United States Two-year colleges in the United States 1870 establishments in Virginia History of women in Virginia