Christopher Newport University
Christopher Newport University is a public liberal arts university in Newport News, Virginia. CNU is the youngest comprehensive university in the commonwealth of Virginia. The institution is named after Christopher Newport, who was a buccaneer and captain of Susan Constant, the largest of three ships which carried settlers for the Virginia Company in 1607, on their way to found Jamestown in the Virginia Colony, which became the first permanent English settlement in North America.
History
In 1960 the city of Newport News joined together with the Commonwealth of Virginia to create Christopher Newport College, which opened its doors in 1961 and at the time was located in the old John W. Daniel School building. The college was founded as an extension of the College of William & Mary and offered extension courses that had already been available in the area for some time. In 1964 the college was relocated to its current location, a tract of land purchased and donated by the city. In this same year, the college's first permanent building was dedicated as Christopher Newport Hall. In 1971, CNC became a four-year college; however, it remained an extension of William & Mary until 1977 when it attained its independence. In 1992, the college became a university under the leadership of President Anthony R. Santoro, who oversaw the building of the first residence hall.In 1996, CNU made plans to become more competitive. Those plans included the expansion of university property, several new buildings and residence halls, as well as overhauling academic programs and the admission process.
Presidents
- H. Wescott Cunningham 1961–1970
- Dr. James C. Windsor 1970–1979
- Dr. John E. Anderson 1979–1987
- Dr. Anthony Santoro 1987–1996
- Paul S. Trible 1996–present
Academics
Joseph W. Luter, III School of Business
The School of Business is accredited by the AACSB.College of Arts and Humanities
CNU's College of Arts and Humanities includes the Departments of English, Fine Art and Art History, History, Modern and Classical Languages and Literatures, Music, Philosophy and Religion, and Theater and Dance.Army Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC)
The Army Reserve Officer Training Corps has maintained a strong presence at CNU for several years, offering classroom and field based training. The program is a component of the College of William and Mary's ROTC program, known as the Revolutionary Guard Battalion. It commissions several new US Army second lieutenants each year.The Department of Fine Art and Art History
The Fine Art Department, located in the back of the Ferguson Center, offers a degree in fine arts with concentrations in art history and studio art.The Department of Theatre & Dance
The Theatre & Dance Department offers a degree in theater arts and a Bachelor of Music degree.Student profile
- 44% male, 56% female
- Students from every region in Virginia and 32 other states as well as several foreign countries
- Average high school GPA of 3.8 for the 2017–2018 academic year
- Average SAT 1192 Average Math and Reading
- Student demographics
- *7% African American, 3% Asian American or Pacific Islander, 7% Hispanic American
- *24% of the entering 2017–2018 freshman class are minority students
- *0.12% representing 30 other countries
Athletics
CNU sports club programs include ice hockey, equestrian, dressage, cycling, fishing, lacrosse, martial arts, rock climbing, rugby, scuba diving, silver storm dance, soccer, swimming, table tennis, tennis, ultimate frisbee, rowing and volleyball.
Sports
- Baseball
- Cross Country
- Basketball
- Cheerleading
- Field Hockey
- American football
- Golf
- Lacrosse
- Sailing
- Soccer
- Softball
- Swimming
- Tennis
- Track
- Volleyball
Campus
Residence halls
Residence halls on campus are usually segregated into the class of student living in them. In the recent years, new policies have been enacted that require all freshman and sophomore students to live in an on campus housing facility, unless they live in the commuting zone. Starting with the class of 2014, all students must live on campus during the junior year in addition to their freshman and sophomore years.;Freshman housing
The oldest housing facility on campus is Santoro Hall. Opened in 1992, the hall was named in honor of then President Anthony Santoro and his wife, Carol. This building is directly adjacent to one of the campus dining facilities, the Hiden-Hussey Commons. Santoro Hall, along with the newer York River Hall, is primarily used for freshman housing. York River Hall opened in 2002. This complex, consisting of two buildings, houses over 500 students and is the largest residence hall on campus. Both Santoro and York River Halls are suite-style living residence halls. In each building, pairs of neighboring housing units share a common private restroom. Freshman also live in portions of Potomac River Hall.
;Upperclassmen housing
Sophomore housing currently consists of James River Hall, opened in 2000, half of Potomac River Hall, opened in 2004, as well as Warwick River Hall, opened in 2012. James River Hall boasts a variety of floor plans, including 4-, 5-, and 6-person apartments, 4-person suites, and three 15-person Theme Units. Potomac Hall, like York River Hall, is divided into two buildings, and consists of suites of two bedrooms, located around a central living room and bath. Warwick River Hall is the newest residence hall on campus and accommodates 447 students in 4-, 5-, and 6-person suites each with a shared living room and bathroom.
Juniors and Seniors living on campus are generally assigned to either East Campus or Rappahannock River Hall. James River Hall also accommodates Juniors and Seniors in apartment style dorms. CNU is currently planning construction on a dedicated upperclassmen residence, to be called "Shenandoah Hall." It is expected to house more than 200 seniors and to open in summer 2020. Starting in 2009, five sororities and four fraternities live in Barclay Apartments, CNU's temporary Greek Village, and any additional fraternities and sororities live in the adjacent townhouses of CNU Landing as of 2012. Completed in 2002, CNU Apartments is a complex of five buildings of three or four stories, housing up to 355 students. These buildings, named after Virginia-born presidents, include Washington, Jefferson, Madison, Harrison, and Monroe. The CNU Village rose to accompany CNU Apartments in 2005, adding room for an additional 398 students in apartment living. Both the apartments and the Village feature 2 to 4 single bedroom apartments with a common living area. Below CNU Village, along Warwick Blvd., are a variety of eating establishments including Panera Bread, Moe's Southwest Grill, Subway, 7-11, Sushi & Spice, and Schooners, opened by three local restaurateurs who wanted to fill a void left by the lack of a social outlet on campus.
The David Student Union
The David Student Union is a $36 million, facility whose construction began in 2003 and opened September 9, 2006. Constructed in a "Neo-Georgian" architectural style, the first floor contains the campus Convenience Store, parallel the DSU dining facilities: The Discovery Bistro, Discovery Cafe, Chick-fil-A, Discovery Pizza, and Regatta's. The campus Bookstore and Convenience Store closed during the Fall 2010 semester in favor of an online bookstore and instead contains a student lounge, admissions office, and apparel store. All on-campus students receive a mailbox and access to a full-service Post Office located on the second floor of the DSU. Four large conference rooms named for past U.S. Presidents are located around a central lobby area at the top of the steps. The Ballroom is also located on the second floor. The building provides offices for Student Life, The Captain's Log, Career Development, International Studies, Academic Advising, and others. Private desks with computers are provided for students as well as quiet study sections and recreational areas. The building was named in honor of William R. and Goldie R. David.Academic buildings
For the opening of the Spring 2010 semester, Christopher Newport University opened the Lewis Archer McMurran, Jr. Hall. This building has neo-Georgian architecture. The building is 85,000 square feet and frames the university's Great Lawn on its western side. McMurran Hall houses the Departments of Modern and Classical Languages and Literatures, History, English, and Government. It has a 150-person lecture hall, two 50-person lecture halls, and over 25 other classrooms.To the north of McMurran Hall is Ratcliffe Hall, the former home of the Departments of English and Government. Once CNU's gymnasium, the building was renovated to include classroom and office space for students and faculty. Other academic buildings on campus include Gosnold Hall, Forbes Hall, and the Business and Technology Center, located across Prince Drew Lane. Finally, the Ferguson Center for the Arts is home to the Departments of Music and Theater & Dance.
Wingfield Hall, the former home of the Departments of Psychology and Language, was demolished in 2011 to make way for the Joseph W. Luter Hall, home of the school of business.
The Joseph W. Luter, III Hall is the house of the Luter School of Business. The building, following the Neo-Georgian architecture of surrounding new structures, has a new 100-seat tiered lecture hall, 14 traditional classrooms, teachings labs, research labs and faculty offices.
The Mary Brock Forbes Integrated Science Building is a academic hall situated on the north edge of the great lawn, and houses the College of Natural and Behavioral Science as well as the Biology, Chemistry, Environmental Science and Psychology departments. It also includes spaces for students to interact, 50 faculty offices, a large lecture hall, 50 classrooms, and research labs.
The Paul and Rosemary Trible Library
The university's library, renamed for Rosemary and Paul S. Trible, Jr., had a multimillion-dollar addition completed in early 2008. The new facility houses most of its collection in the original section. The new library was dedicated January 24, 2008, and fully opened at the start of the Spring 2008 semester. The Trible Library boasts a new Einstein's Cafe, a 24-hour study lounge, and an IT help desk.In early 2009, the Mariners' Museum Library relocated to the Trible Library, providing students and the community with convenient access to the largest maritime history collection in the Western Hemisphere. The Paul and Rosemary Trible Library was slated for another expansion beginning in 2016 which would add another floor to the back portion of the facility. Due to the renovations, the Mariners' Museum Library moved back to the Mariners' Museum and reopened in Fall 2017.
In August 2018, the library expansion opened adding 3 floors of new space. Additions included a 100-seat theater, expanded Media Center, a two-story reading room, and 44 group study rooms.
Ferguson Center for the Arts
In 1996 the university acquired the Ferguson High School building and property, which was adjacent to campus. This building was used for classrooms until it was extensively renovated to become the Ferguson Center for the Arts, which opened in fall of 2005. Many features of the original high school, which was located between what is now the concert hall and the music and theatre hall, can still be seen throughout the current building. It houses a 1,725-seat concert hall which is acoustically engineered so that anyone on stage can be heard from any seat without a microphone, A 453-seat music and theatre hall, and a 200-seat studio theatre. It also contains two art galleries, a dance studio, and several classrooms.Pope Chapel
Opened in early 2013, the Pope Chapel, named for Larry Pope of Smithfield Foods, is a gathering place for various on campus religious organizations located at the campus entrance across from York River Hall and the Trible Library.Christopher Newport Hall
In the fall of 2015 a new administration building was opened and named Christopher Newport Hall. The structure houses the Office of Admission, Office of the Registrar, Financial Aid, Housing, the Center for Academic Success, the President's Leadership Program and the Center for Career Planning, among others. The $42 million facility serves as a new landmark on campus and is at the head of the Great Lawn opposite Lewis Archer McMurran, Jr. Hall. In May 2015, towards the end of construction, Newport Hall served as the backdrop for commencement ceremonies.Student life
''The Captain's Log''
The Captain's Log is a student run organization that acts as the official newspaper of Christopher Newport University.''Currents''
Currents is CNU's completely student-run literary magazine. Students from all disciplines may submit poetry, fiction, creative non-fiction, playwriting, and lyrics. Currents is also CNU's oldest on-campus organization.Greek life
Greek life at Christopher Newport has grown in the recent years to include eight North American Interfraternity Conference listed fraternities, seven National Panhellenic Conference listed sororities and four NPHC listed Greek organizations.NIC fraternities
- Kappa Delta Rho
- Kappa Sigma
- Lambda Chi Alpha
- Phi Gamma Delta
- Pi Kappa Alpha
- Pi Lambda Phi
- Sigma Phi Epsilon
- Delta Upsilon
- Psi Upsilon
NPHC listed
- Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity
- Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority
- Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity
- Delta Sigma Theta sorority
- Zeta Phi Beta sorority
- Alpha Chi
- Alpha Kappa Psi co-ed professional business fraternity
- Alpha Phi Omega co-ed service fraternity
- Alpha Psi Omega co-ed honorary theater fraternity
- Beta Gamma Sigma
- Beta Beta Beta
- Eta Sigma Phi
- Gamma Sigma Epsilon
- Kappa Pi Zeta Alpha Tau Chapter
- Lambda Pi Eta, Sigma Kappa Chapter
- Nu Kappa Epsilon, Beta Chapter
- Omicron Delta Kappa
- Phi Alpha, Chi Kappa Chapter
- Phi Alpha Delta
- Phi Alpha Theta, Alpha Zeta Mu Chapter
- Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia men's social music fraternity
- Phi Sigma Tau
- Pi Sigma Alpha
- Pi Kappa Lambda co-ed honorary fraternity in music
- Pi Mu Epsilon
- Psi Chi
- Sigma Alpha Iota women's music sorority
- Kappa Kappa Psi Co-Ed Honorary music fraternity
- Sigma Alpha Omega
- Sigma Tau Delta, Iota Omicron Chapter
- Theta Alpha Kappa
- Upsilon Pi Epsilon
Campus ministries
WCNU Radio
WCNU Radio is a student-run, non-commercial, web-based radio station.Notable people
Alumni
- William Lamont Strothers ; NBA player, Portland Trail Blazers, Dallas Mavericks
- Robin Abbott ; Former Virginia House of Delegates Representative for the 93rd District.
- Michael Caro; ; soccer player
- Shirley Cooper; ; Former Virginia House of Delegates Representative for the 96th District.
- Gary Hudson; actor - Did not graduate
- Karen Jackson, Former Virginia Secretary of Technology
- Randall Munroe creator of xkcd.
- Chris Richardson; American Idol finalist - Did not graduate
- Sam Ruby; ; Software Engineer.
- Colleen Doran Cartoonist
- C9 Meteos; or Will Hartman
- Michael P. Mullin; Virginia House of Delegates Representative for the 93rd District.
- Jesse Pippy; Maryland House of Delegates Representative for the 4th District.
- Melanie Rapp; Virginia House of Delegates Representative for the 96th District.
- Kaitlyn Vincie; sports presenter and journalist.
- Jeion Ward; Virginia House of Delegates Representative for the 92nd District.
- Mojo Rawley ; NFL Player for the Green Bay Packers and Arizona Cardinals, WWE Champion
Faculty
- Philip Dimitrov, former Prime Minister of Bulgaria
- Dr. Jeffrey Bergner, former Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs