Southern West Virginia Community and Technical College


Southern West Virginia Community and Technical College is a public community college with its main campus in Mount Gay, West Virginia.

History

The school was founded as the Logan and Williamson branches of Marshall College in 1960 and renamed as branches of Marshall University when their mother institution achieved university status in 1961. It had community college jurisdiction over Logan and Mingo counties. In both cases, the schools were housed in the buildings that had been surplussed by the desegregation of public education. The "branch college", as it was often called, sported basketball teams at each of its two campuses.
In 1970, the two branches were merged and became a stand-alone community college. The college's jurisdiction was expanded to include Boone County and Wyoming County. Classes in these counties were held in leased locations until 1971, when a permanent building was constructed in Williamson.
In the 1980s, the college was refocused and permanent buildings were built in each county.
Joanne Jaeger Tomblin, the wife of West Virginia Governor Earl Ray Tomblin, served as President of the community college from November, 1999 to June, 2015.

Academics

Southern provides both associate degrees in 2-year fields and the first two years of a four-year degree in the anticipation of a transfer to a bachelor's level institution.
The service area of the school was expanded by 1995 legislation that divided West Virginia into eleven districts. Southern serves all of Boone, Lincoln, Logan, McDowell, Mingo, and Wyoming counties.
Approximately 1,100 students are enrolled. Less than half of them attend part-time.
The school has no residential programs and no athletics. It does have school colors, gold and black.

Locations

Campus locations are in Foster, Mount Gay, Williamson and Saulsville.