Lipscomb University


Lipscomb University is a private Christian university in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It is affiliated with the Churches of Christ. The campus is located in the Green Hills neighborhood of Nashville; it also maintains one satellite location called "Spark" in Downtown Nashville to serve the business community. Total student enrollment for the fall 2022 semester was 4,704, which included 2,955 undergraduate students and 1,749 graduate students. Lipscomb has been rated the #3 Best College in Tennessee.

History

Lipscomb University was founded in 1891 by David Lipscomb and James A. Harding. The campus grounds consist predominantly of the former estate of David Lipscomb, who donated it to the school. The school was always intended to function as a Christian liberal arts institution. It is still affiliated with the Churches of Christ and a seminary is part of the university.
In an early catalog, the founders expressed their views about providing a liberal education that included Christian underpinning:
Several prominent Church of Christ ministers received at least a portion of their higher education here. The university remains thoroughly affiliated in the Churches of Christ: potential full-time, undergraduate faculty must prove their membership in a Church of Christ before being hired.
Its original name was the Nashville Bible School, which was changed to David Lipscomb College, then to Lipscomb University. Lipscomb graduated its first senior class in 1948. In 1954, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools granted Lipscomb its first accreditation. In 1988, Lipscomb attained Level III status and became known as Lipscomb University.
Some academic buildings were built with tax-exempt municipal bonds, and, because Lipscomb is a Christian school, this led to an extended lawsuit on the basis of whether or not a private religious institution is allowed to use public bonds. This case was debated for many years and ultimately made it to the Supreme Court.
In September 2020, Lipscomb announced that it would be merging with the Austin Graduate School of Theology in Austin, Texas. The merger would become official in January 2021, with Lipscomb managing all of AGST's affairs and expanding their course offerings. Later, AGST folded due to financial troubles.

Presidents

There have been 14 superintendents or presidents of Lipscomb over 18 administrations.
  • James A. Harding
  • William Anderson
  • J. S. Ward
  • E. A. Elam
  • J. S. Ward
  • H. Leo Boles
  • A. B. Lipscomb
  • H. S. Lipscomb
  • H. Leo Boles
  • Batsell Baxter
  • E. H. Ijams
  • Batsell Baxter
  • Athens Clay Pullias
  • G. Willard Collins
  • Harold Hazelip
  • Steve Flatt
  • L. Randolph Lowry III
  • Candice McQueen
The Nashville Bible School was co-founded in 1891 by college founders David Lipscomb and James A. Harding. David Lipscomb never served as president, but as chairman of the board of trustees. James A. Harding served as the school's first superintendent.

Campus

Image:WTN EVula 153.jpg|thumb|Bison Square
The James D. Hughes Center houses all the university's health-science programs and the physician assistant program. The Nursing and Health Sciences Center next door houses the graduate College of Nursing.
Lipscomb has announced plans for a new College of Business building and a new performing arts center.

Student life

Lipscomb does not have fraternities and sororities. Rather, it has social clubs, which are local and unique to Lipscomb University and are not part of any national Greek system.
The Babbler is the defunct student newspaper and was published weekly during the spring and fall semesters. The title of the publication came from Acts 17:18 which in part says "What does this babbler have to say?" The Backlog is the school's yearbook and is published annually. The Lumination Network, the school's converged student media outlet, replaced the weekly Babbler and is tied heavily with the academic program of the Department of Communication and Journalism. "Lumination Network is Lipscomb University's official student news service." An independent student newsletter, the Lipscomb Underground, provided unfiltered student opinion for the campus. The LU originally ran from 1994 to 2008, resurfacing in 2016, and persisting on Twitter until 2018. The name Lipscomb Underground comes from the musical Les Misérables which in part says "Make for the sewers, go underground!"

Student body

, Lipscomb University had 39% male students and 61% female students.

Athletics

Lipscomb athletic teams are the Bisons. The university is a member of the Division I level of National Collegiate Athletic Association, primarily competing in the ASUN Conference.
Lipscomb competes in 17 intercollegiate varsity sports: men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, tennis and track & field ; women's sports include basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, softball, tennis, track & field and volleyball.
The university has an ongoing sports rivalry with Belmont University, just down the road from Lipscomb. Traditionally, basketball games between the two schools are called the "Battle of the Boulevard". In 2006, the rivalry reached a new level when Belmont and Lipscomb advanced to the finals of the Atlantic Sun tournament at the Memorial Center in Johnson City, Tennessee, with the winner earning its first-ever bid to the NCAA tournament. Belmont won 74–69 in overtime. Lipscomb was invited to the National Invitation Tournament as the regular-season conference champion, "the program's first-ever post-season appearance."
In 2019, Lipscomb made the NIT basketball finals, falling to the Texas Longhorns.

Notable alumni

Academia