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Home Tennessee Greene County Greeneville Historical Markers Tusculum College

Tusculum College

67 Gilland Street, Greeneville, TN , USA

Latitude & Longitude: 36° 10' 25.11246", -82° 45' 40.332528"
  Tennessee TN State Historical Marker
Tennessee State
Historical Marker


National Register of Historic Places

Listed in the National Register of Historic Places
 
Tusculum College
President Andrew Johnson Museum & Library


During the 1861 secession debates, Greene County was mostly Unionist, but Tusculum College students were divided. Before the June secession vote, then-U.S. Sen. Johnson spoke in Greeneville in support of the Union. Afterward, secessionist students burned Johnson in effigy and raised a Confederate flag over Old College. Confronted by a professor loyal to the Union, a student helped lower the flag, for which his classmates called him ?Benedict Arnold.? The administration suspended classes, and students went home.

The college suffered during the war as both Federal and Confederate forces camped in and around the building. In July 1865, college trustees reported: ?The late war has left Tusculum College in a deplorable condition?its enclosures are broken down, its library much wasted and abused and its chemical and philosophical apparatus broken and destroyed.? Another local institution, Greeneville College, suffered so much that its campus was sold for a mere $700 after the war and its library was sent to Old College. In 1868, the two schools merged as Greeneville and Tusculum College, using the rooms and facilities at Old College.

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The oldest college in Tennessee, Tusculum College is a significant part of the state's Civil War occupation story. Old College, the only building remaining from that era, was built in 1841. Greeneville resident Andrew Johnson donated to the building's construction. He served as Tennessee's military governor during the war and as President of the United States after President Abraham Lincoln's assassination In April 1865. The Old College, listed on the National Register of Historic Places, now houses the President Andrew John Museum and Library.

Tennessee Civil War Trails.

Last updated: 2/14/2015 15:17:00
 
    Related Themes: C.S.A., Confederate States of America, Confederacy, Union States
 
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Tusculum College Historical Marker Location Map, Greeneville, Tennessee Map