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Black History Month: Morehouse College (1867- )

Next generation: Morehouse College graduation day in 2002

February is Black History Month and this year marks the 400th anniversary that blacks were brought to Bermuda as indentured servants. Throughout this month, The Royal Gazette will feature people, events, places and institutions that have contributed to the shaping of African history.

A private, historically black college for men, Morehouse College opened in 1867 to train former slaves to be Protestant ministers and educators.

Today, Morehouse is one of five colleges in the Atlanta University Centre, a complex that has included Morehouse’s sister school, Spelman College, as well as Clark Atlanta University, Morris Brown College and the Interdenominational Theological Centre. The affiliated Morehouse School of Medicine opened in 1975.

Although located in Georgia’s capital city, Morehouse originated as the Augusta Institute in Augusta, Georgia, just two years after the Civil War.

The Augusta Institute relocated to Atlanta in 1879 and became known as Atlanta Baptist Seminary. Students initially attended classes in the basement of Friendship Baptist Church. When John D. Rockefeller donated land near Spelman for the men’s college in the 1880s, the school moved to its present location in southwest Atlanta.

In 1913, while under the leadership of the college’s first African-American president, John Hope, the school’s name changed to Morehouse College.

The new designation honoured Henry Lyman Morehouse, the white, northern-born minister and prominent member of the American Baptist Home Mission Society of New York, who donated funds to the college. Since the school opened its door during the Reconstruction era, Morehouse has continued to benefit from the donations of philanthropists and alumni.

Faculty and staff at Morehouse instruct students to embody a set of characteristics known as the “Morehouse Mystique”. Created by Benjamin Elijah Mays during his tenure as president between 1940 and 1967, the five tenets uphold academic excellence, the elocutionary arts, high moral values, social commitment and the belief in a higher power.

While attending school at Morehouse, the male student body often participates in secretive, late-night bonding ceremonies.

During Spirit Night, for example, campus leaders rouse freshmen from their beds after midnight for a rite of passage that introduces them to the Morehouse Mystique.

Students also learn the accomplishments of previous “Maroon Tigers”, including the four generations of Atlanta’s Martin Luther King family that graduated from the college. In another venerated tradition, often known as “answering the call,” students assemble when they hear the sound of a bell located in front of Sale Hall. Alumnus Shelton “Spike” Lee (class of 1978) incorporated this ritual into the final scene of his 1988 film, School Daze. With enrolment of approximately 3,000 students, Morehouse offers 26 majors in three academic divisions: business administration and economics, humanities and social sciences, and science and mathematics.

The school has produced three Rhodes, five Fulbright, five Marshall and five Luce scholars. Its distinguished alumni include Martin Luther King Jr, the Nobel Peace Prize laureate and civil rights leader, film-maker Spike Lee, Maynard Jackson, the former Mayor of Atlanta, and actor Samuel L. Jackson.

Sources: Morehouse Men, VHS (PBS Home Video, 1995); http://www.morehouse.edu; Benjamin Griffith Brawley, History of Morehouse College: Written on the Authority of the Board of Trustees (Atlanta: Morehouse College, 1917)