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Type | Publiccommunity college |
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Established | 1922 (1922) |
President | Michelle Schoon[1] |
Students | 2,166 (Fall 2023)[2] |
Location | ,, United States[3] 37°3′39″N97°02′33″W / 37.06083°N 97.04250°W /37.06083; -97.04250 |
Colors | Black and Orange |
Website | www |
Cowley College is apubliccommunity college inArkansas City, Kansas. It also operates locations in nearbyWellington,Winfield,Mulvane, andWichita. In addition to an online presence the college offers on-site courses at nine area high schools. Cowley College is accredited by theHigher Learning Commission.
Cowley College held its first classes on Sept. 11, 1922. At this point, it was known as theArkansas City Junior College (ACJC), and, like mostjunior colleges of the time, operated under the directorship of the localschool district. Classes were held on the top floor of the Arkansas City High School, but were soon relocated to the basement, earning it the nickname "Basement University." In 1936, a combination auditorium-gymnasium was constructed, and in 1952, ACJC held its first classes in a dedicated college building.
During the mid-1960s, ACJC began a process of name changes in an attempt to keep current with state legislation designed to spur growth ofjunior colleges andvocational schools in Kansas. After no less than two revisions, in 1965, it was given the name Cowley County Community College and Vocational-Technical School, which was commonly abbreviated CCCC.[4]
In 1967, the citizens ofCowley County elected a six-member board of trustees for CCCC, and on July 1, it assumed control of college operations. The new board appointed Paul Johnson as the first president of the college. Johnson had been the dean of the college under the school board's direction. The county continues to elect members to the board of trustees in four-year terms. Johnson died the following year and was succeeded on an interim basis by William S. Scott until the end of June. On July 1, 1968, Gwendel A. "Gwen" Nelson was appointed president of the college by the board of trustees. Immediately, Nelson began a far-reaching program of expansion and upgrades. When he arrived at the college, it owned no property (the land on which the buildings stood was rented from the school district), and its program offerings were limited. During his tenure, which lasted until 1987, Nelson would be instrumental in land negotiations with the school board, resulting in the college's ownership of all of its main campus and the adjacent old high school. His leadership resulted in great expansion of academic programs, including upgrading the vocational school, and he would oversee the construction of six new buildings, including the college's first dormitories.
In 2017, Sumner County passed a half-cent sales tax increase to fund a second campus of Cowley College to be built in Wellington. Sumner County Campus of Cowley College was planned to open for classes in the fall of 2018. The Short Family of Oxford, Kansas, donated the property for the campus to be built on the south side of Highway 160.[5]
On February 2, 2023, the Cowley College Board of Trustees voted unanimously to terminate President Randy Smith's contract. Michelle Schoon was appointed to serve as Interim President.[6]
The college's main campus is inArkansas City, Kansas. It also operates locations in nearbyWinfield,Mulvane,Wellington, andWichita. In addition to its online presence the college offers on-site courses at nine area high schools. Cowley College's Ireland Hall, was designed byarchitectCharles Sumner Sedgwick and constructed in 1890 as theArkansas City High School.[7] It is listed on theNational Register of Historic Places asOld Arkansas City High School and considered one of the oldest, standing buildings in the city.