Vincennes University
Vincennes University is a public university with its main campus in Vincennes, Indiana. Founded in 1801 as Jefferson Academy, VU is the oldest public institution of higher learning in the Northwest Territory and in Indiana. VU was chartered in 1806 as the Indiana Territory's four-year university and remained the state of Indiana's sole publicly funded four-year university until the establishment of Indiana University in 1820. In 1889, VU was chartered by the State of Indiana as a two-year university. From 1999 to 2005, Vincennes University was in a state-mandated partnership with what became the Ivy Tech Community College. In 2005, VU began offering baccalaureate degrees.
VU's campus in Vincennes is a residential campus nestled along the banks of the Wabash River. Other VU sites include a campus in Jasper, Indiana, the Center for Advanced Manufacturing and Logistics in Fort Branch, Indiana, along with centers for Aviation, Logistics, Advanced Manufacturing, and American Sign Language, in the Indianapolis area.
History
Territorial University
Vincennes University is one of the oldest universities north of the Ohio River and west of the Alleghenies. The institution was founded in 1801 as Jefferson Academy and incorporated as Vincennes University on November 29, 1806. Founded by William Henry Harrison, VU is one of only two U.S. colleges founded by a President of the United States; the other is the University of Virginia, founded by Thomas Jefferson. For over two-hundred years, VU was historically the only two-year university in Indiana, although baccalaureate degrees in seven select areas are now available and were available prior to 1889.Vincennes University, also known colloquially as Territorial University during the early 19th century, was the only public university established by the Indiana Territory, prior to the formation of the states of Indiana and Illinois. The town of Vincennes was chosen as the location of both the capital of the Indiana Territory and of VU because it was centrally located at the approximate population-density center of the Indiana Territory. Upon the later formation of the Illinois Territory in 1809 in preparation for Indiana statehood, Vincennes fell slightly east of the State of Indiana/Illinois Territory border. As territorial policy progressed through the formation of the Illinois Territory in 1809, the formation of the state of Indiana in 1816, and the formation of the State of Illinois in 1818, funding for Vincennes University became less and less certain because VU was considered to be owned by the now-defunct Indiana Territory.
Because of Vincennes’ status as the capital of the Indiana Territory, it figured prominently in early Indiana-Illinois territorial and statehood policy. For example, on February 3, 1809, the Tenth U.S. Congress passed legislation establishing the separate Indiana Territory in preparation for Indiana's proposed statehood. That Act established the Indiana-Illinois border not with reference to a landmark along Lake Michigan near Chicago, but rather via direct reference to Vincennes: "...all that part of the Indiana Territory which lies west of the Wabash river, and a direct line drawn from the said Wabash river and Post Vincennes, due north to the territorial line between the United States and Canada..."
State of Indiana's State University
Further complicating the question of funding for VU was the State of Indiana's desire to establish its own state-controlled public university in Bloomington, Indiana. Until the establishment of Indiana University, Vincennes University was the sole public university within the entire Indiana Territory and then more narrowly within the state of Indiana. The states of Indiana and of Illinois partially abandoned their financial responsibility for the Territorial University after they had established their own separate public universities that did not present the legal complications of an institution whose legal control perhaps spanned the borders of at least two states and had been established by a defunct governmental entity. Conversely, these complications also set the stage for VU's rich two-century long history with some of the most architecturally-significant early 19th-century buildings to be found at any two-year institution in the U.S.In the mid-19th century, the Indiana state legislature tried to reclaim the original VU land grant, to be used for what would become Indiana University. The resulting lawsuit was eventually heard by the U.S. Supreme Court, who decided in VU's favor, based on its earlier decision in a similar case regarding Dartmouth College. The legal dispute arose in part because a portion of VU's status as a land-grant public university derived from the fact that VU is the inheritor of the land-grant and facilities of Territorial University.
To clarify the mission of VU vis a vis Indiana's other institutions of higher education at the time-Purdue University, the State Normal School, and Indiana University, the state of Indiana rechartered VU in 1889, changing it from a four-year university to a two-year university.
Tau Phi Delta and the Sigma Pi fraternity
In 1897, a small literary society called Tau Phi Delta was started at VU, which soon after became the founding chapter of Sigma Pi Fraternity, making that organization the first of its kind to be founded west of the Ohio Valley. A clock tower on the VU campus commemorates that event. The fraternity has since grown into one of the largest collegiate fraternities and, despite having relocated its headquarters to Tennessee, recognizes VU as its birthplace.Relationship with Ivy Tech Community College
In 1999, Indiana Governor Frank O'Bannon and Stan Jones, commissioner for higher education, persuaded the Indiana state legislature to mandate a "coordinated partnership" between Vincennes University and what was then called Ivy Tech State College. Writing for a national publication, reporter William Trombley characterized the "shotgun marriage" as something that was spoken of cautiously by officials at both institutions: "It was not our initiative," Vincennes President Phillip M. Summers said in an interview. "We were asked if we would participate and we agreed". Thomas Cooke, dean of instruction at the Ivy Tech Indianapolis campus, said "We have everything except the liberal arts degree... And that could be easily accommodated within our present structure". This tenuous arrangement was dissolved by the 2005 rechartering of Ivy Tech State College as a statewide system of comprehensive community colleges named Ivy Tech Community College.Academics
Vincennes University offers a diverse set of majors that are focused on careers in teaching and industry. Vincennes University has a 24% graduation rate.Vincennes University is organized into six colleges:
- Business and Public Service
- Health Sciences and Human Performance
- Humanities
- Science, Engineering, and Mathematics
- Social Science, Performing Arts, and Communications
- Technology.
Buildings
Main campus
- Updike Hall of Science Engineering and Mathematics
- Jefferson Student Union
- Construction Technology Building
- Shircliff Humanities Building
- Davis Hall
- Homeland Security Building
- Governors Hall
- Welsh Administration Building
- Beckes Student Union
- Wathen Business Building
- Bell Student Recreation Center
- PE Complex
- Summers Social Science Building
- Beless Gym
- Green Activities Center
- Dayson Alumni Center
- Young Building – Statewide Services
- Center for Health Sciences
- Tecumseh Dining Center
- Red Skelton Performing Arts Center / Red Skelton Museum
- Shake Learning Resource Center / Lewis Historical Library
- Automotive Technology Building
- Residence Halls
- *Clark Hall
- *Ebner Hall
- *Godare Hall
- *Harrison Hall
- *Morris Hall
- *Vanderburgh Hall
- *Vigo Hall
- Outlying Main Facilities
- *Indiana
- **John Deere Agriculture Tech Building
- *Illinois
- **O'Neill Airfield; Westport, Illinois
- **Mid America International Airport; Lawrenceville, Illinois
- State historic buildings
- *Jefferson Academy building
- *Indiana Territory Capitol Building
- *Elihu Stout Print Shop
Jasper
- Ruxer Student Center
- Habig Technology Center
- Administrative Classroom Building
- New Classroom Building
- Center for Technology Innovation and Manufacturing Building
Indianapolis area
- Aviation Technology Center – houses the Aviation Maintenance program and ground classes for the Aviation Flight Program on the grounds of the Indianapolis International Airport.
- Vincennes University Aviation – located on the grounds of Eagle Creek Airpark, this is the base airport for all active Vincennes University aircraft. The fleet consists of many Cessna 172R type aircraft and a Piper PA-44 Seminole.
- American Sign Language program at the Indiana School for the Deaf.
- Logistics Training and Education Center, Plainfield, Indiana
- Gene Haas Training and Education Center, Lebanon, Indiana
Fort Branch / Gibson County
- Center for Advanced Manufacturing
- *February 2016 – In cooperation with North American Crane Certifications, this facility became an official training and testing site for Crane Institute Certification.
Athletics
The VU Trailblazers compete in baseball, bowling, golf, basketball, cross country, volleyball, and track and field. Its bowling team is particularly well known as it has won 21 NJCAA national championships. The men's bowling team won the 1983 USBC collegiate national championship. The men's basketball team is a national NJCAA power, winning national titles in 1965, 1970, 1972 and 2019; they were national finalists in 1986. The men's cross-country team won NJCAA titles in 1969 and 1971; they have 12 additional "Top Ten" finishes in the NJCAA National Finals.
Broadcasting facilities
The university operates television station WVUT, a PBS affiliate, on channel 22. It also operates full-power radio stations WVUB at 91.1 MHz —WFML at 96.7 MHz.Notable faculty and staff
- Jerry Blemker, baseball coach
Notable alumni
- Isaac K. Beckes, president of Vincennes University from 1950 to 1980
- Max Mapes Ellis, physiologist and explorer.
- William Gainey – first Senior Enlisted Advisor to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
- David Goodnow – CNN news anchor, retired
- Rickey Green - former NBA player
- Willie Humes -- All-American basketball player; Indiana Basketball Hall of Fame inductee
- Mario Joyner – stand-up comedian and actor
- Carl Landry – former NBA player
- Newton Lee – Computer scientist, author, futurist, and chairman of the California Transhumanist Party.
- Shawn Marion – former NBA player
- Bob McAdoo – former NBA player, Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductee
- John Mellencamp – musician
- Mychal Mulder - NBA player
- Jerry Reynolds – former NBA Coach, General Manager; current broadcaster for Sacramento Kings
- Curtis G. Shake – jurist, politician, 72nd Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court, State Senator, and one of the Judges of the United States Nuremberg Military Tribunals
- Maurice Cole Tanquary – entomologist and explorer
- Eric Williams – former NBA player
- Clarence "Foots" Walker – former NBA player