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Daniel Payne College

Coordinates:33°31′00″N86°47′25″W/ 33.51671°N 86.79031°W/33.51671; -86.79031
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Payne University in Selma Alabama in 1906
Daniel Payne College
TypeHBCU
Active1889–1979
Location,,
United States

Daniel Payne College,also known as thePayne Institute,Payne UniversityandGreater Payne University,[1]was ahistorically black collegeinBirmingham,Alabamafrom 1889 to 1979. It was associated with theAfrican Methodist Episcopal Church(AME Church).[2]The college was named in honor ofDaniel Payne,the sixth bishop of the AME Church and the first black president of a college in the United States.[2]

History

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The college was founded inSelmain 1889.[2]Its campus was located at 1525 Franklin Street and included the Bishop Gaines Hall as the primary building, two additional classroom buildings and Coppin Hall which served as adormitory.[3]The college stayed at that location through 1922, when it relocated to itsWoodlawnlocation within the city of Birmingham.[2]

The college was located at 6415 Washington Boulevard. By 1974, the college had to be relocated because of airport expansion and the building ofinterstate highwaysin the area.[2]The street on which the college was located no longer exists; however, a remnant of University Avenue that once led to the campus connects to the Messer Airport Highway.[4]

The college moved to a new campus at the southeast corner of Cherry Avenue and Daniel Payne Drive on the far northern edge of Birmingham, where new buildings were constructed in 1974.[2]On April 4, 1977 a destructivetornadotore through the campus, severely damaging buildings.[5]The damage, along with mounting financial problems, forced the school to file forbankruptcyin 1978 and close its doors in 1979.[2][5]At the time of its closure, the college had 120 students enrolled on the 153 acres (0.239 sq mi; 0.619 km2) campus.[2]

Later a group of students sued the former president, claiming that he had mismanaged college funds. A court ruling established the precedent that students have a vested interest in the operation of the college which they attend.[2]

Physical legacy

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After the college closed, the city of Birmingham changed the name of Sayreton Road to Daniel Payne Drive in honor of the bishop and educator. The old campus still exists, although the dormitories have been abandoned. Other buildings were adapted for use as a public health clinic, and as the headquarters for the African Methodist Episcopal Church in Alabama. In 2009, the AME Church offices were relocated to downtown Birmingham.[2]

In 2010 the AME Church announced plans to redevelop the campus as a retirement home and multi-use project. The former campus was severely damaged by the April 2011 tornado outbreak in Birmingham.

References

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  1. ^Brown, Ray C. (November 11, 2014)."Alabama Colleges that have Closed, Merged, or Changed Names".Ray C. Brown.Retrieved2015-12-07.
  2. ^abcdefghijGarrison, Greg (February 21, 1997). "New lease on life: Students returning to Payne".The Birmingham News.pp. 1H.
  3. ^Digital Sanborn Maps(Map) (Selma May 1925, Sheet 20 ed.). ProQuest Information and Learning.
  4. ^MacDonald, Ginny (January 2, 2007). "Fun facts, historical tidbits and tips to find your way through Birmingham".The Birmingham News.pp. 2B.
  5. ^abNOAA."April 4, 1977, Smithfield F5 Tornado".Archived fromthe originalon August 20, 2006.Retrieved2008-03-29.

33°31′00″N86°47′25″W/ 33.51671°N 86.79031°W/33.51671; -86.79031