About Huston-Tillotson University
Mission Statement
Huston-Tillotson University is a historically black college affiliated with The United Methodist Church, the United Church of Christ, and the United Negro College Fund (UNCF).
The mission of the University is to provide its increasingly diverse
student body with an exemplary education that is grounded in the
liberal arts and sciences, balanced with professional development, and
directed to public service and leadership. The University prepares
students with the integrity and civility to thrive in a diverse
society, fosters spiritual development, preserves and promotes
interest in the accomplishments and experiences of the University’s
historic constituents and evolving population, and creates and
sustains supportive relationships which advance the Huston-Tillotson
University community.
General Information
Huston-Tillotson University,
in Austin, is a coeducational college of liberal arts and sciences,
operating jointly under the auspices of the American Missionary
Association of the United Church of Christ, and the Board of Education
of The United Methodist Church. Huston-Tillotson College officially
changed its name to Huston-Tillotson University on February 28, 2005.
Huston-Tillotson College was
formed by the merger of Samuel Huston College and Tillotson College,
which was effective on October 24, 1952. Huston-Tillotson College
remained primarily a black college after the merger, although there
were no restrictions as to race.
Huston-Tillotson University
awards undergraduates, four year degrees in business, education, the
humanities, natural sciences, social sciences, science and technology.
A multi-cultural, multi-ethnic, and multi-faith institution, the
University welcomes students of all ages, races, and religions.
In 1966 the 23-acre campus
contained an administration building, science building, two residence
halls, student union-dining hall, gymnasium-auditorium, music hall,
lounge, and two other halls. The Downs-Jones Library houses more that
86,000 volumes, subscribes to more than 350 periodicals, and is a
member of TexShare, a library resource-sharing program which enables
students, faculty, and staff to borrow books from other member
libraries. By the early 1970s new buildings included a
classroom-administration building, a chapel, an addition of three
wings to the women's dormitory, and an addition of two wings to the
men's dormitory. In 2004, the first phase of renovation work was
completed on the Old Administration Building and it reopened after
standing unoccupied for 35 years.
Mary E. Branch and William H.
Jones, past presidents of Tillotson College and Karl E. Downs, Robert
Harrington, and Willis J. King, past presidents of Samuel Huston
College, undertook cooperative sponsorship of several academic
activities beginning in 1945. Matthew S. Davage served as interim
president during the transition period. He retired in 1955 and was
succeeded by J.J Seabrook, the first permanent president of
Huston-Tillotson. Upon Seabrook's retirement in 1965, John Q. Taylor
King became president. King was president in the 1974-75 term, when
the enrollment was 696 students. King retired in 1988 and Joseph T.
McMillan, Jr., succeeded him. In the fall of 1998 there were 59
faculty members and 621 students at Huston-Tillotson University. Larry
L. Earvin became the fifth president of the University in 2000 and
moved the institution to university status.
The University is a not-for-profit corporation. The president serves as chief executive officer of the corporation.