|
Founded on the Virginia Peninsula by Brigadier General Samuel Chapman Armstrong, the 29 year-old son of missionary parents. Hampton became an oasis of opportunity for the thousands of newly freed people gathered behind Union lines. With the aid of the American Missionary Association, the school was established to train selected young men and young women to "go out to teach and lead their people," and to build a viable industrial system on the strength of self-sufficiency, intelligent labor and solid moral character. |
|
In 1878, Hampton established a
formal education program for Native Americans, beginning the Institute's
lasting commitment to serving a multicultural population. Hampton's
historic Native American education program spanned more than forty years,
with the last student graduating in 1923 . Recent initiatives have
attracted Native American students to renew their ties with Hampton. |
|
In the early days, support for
the Institute came from the Freedman's Bureau, Northern philanthropists
and religious groups with the first classroom building erected in 1870.
The first baccalaureate degrees were awarded in 1922. Two years later, the
school's name was changed to Hampton Institute, reflecting college-level
accreditation. In 1984, Hampton's Board of Trustees formally adopted a
university structure and changed the name to Hampton University, which
today represents the unparalleled standard of excellence in American
higher education. |
| BACK |