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Paine College was founded in 1882 as the result of an unusual collaboration between
Black and White Methodists who believed in church-related education as a means of
advancement for a newly freed and underserved people. Leaders such as Bishop Lucius
Holsey of the Colored (now Christian) Methodist Episcopal Church and Atticus Haygood,
a Bishop in the Methodist Episcopal Church South (now United Methodist) worked to
establish The Paine Institute to train preachers and teachers to educate the newly
freed men and women. In January 1884, classes began in rented quarters at 10th and
Broad Streets in Augusta, Georgia. In 1903 Paine Institute was recharted as The
Paine College.
The College's Tradition of Excellence continues today through present-day students
who are forging their way in an ever-changing, fast-paced global community. In an
effort to meet the challenge, students engage in an array of activities, including
international studies, leadership training, and scholarly activities.
Supported by the United Methodist Church, Paine College is a Historically Black,
private, church-related, four-year, co-educational college which, through its residential,
commuter, and off-site units, strives to develop self-sufficient and productive
citizens, committed to intellectual pursuits and aesthetic appreciation in a global
society. Since its founding in 1882, Paine College has continued to prepare students
for leadership in the local, national, and international communities.
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Paine Institute Class of 1901 |
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