ASU was founded by nine former slaves in Marion on July 18, 1867. Ceremony with President Ross @ 2 p.m. with freshman students collecting soil from "mother campus".
Event titled: "The Inaugural Montgomery to Marion Freshman Pilgrimage."
WHEN: Friday (July 19). From 11 a.m. - 3 p.m. (Ceremony @ 2 p.m.).
WHERE: Marion, Ala. - Lincoln Normal School's Phillip's Memorial Auditorium, 207 Lincoln Street.
NOTE: A poignant ceremony occurs at 2 p.m. in Marion with President Ross & ASU's freshman students.
Over 100 Alabama State University freshmen will spend a day in Marion, Ala., this Friday (July 19) just one day after its 152nd anniversary of when the University was founded by nine former slaves (known as the Marion Nine) who came together on July 18, 1867 in Marion and created the Lincoln Normal School. Today that school has evolved in to the world-class institution of higher education known as Alabama State University.
The ASU freshmen will journey in a pilgrimage of sorts to Marion on Friday to see ASU’s original "mother campus" and participate in a ceremony marking the genesis of ASU.
INAUGURAL 'FIRST-EVER" PROGRAM FRIDAY IN MARION
It is all part of an inaugural program inspired by ASU's President, Dr. Quinton T. Ross, Jr. and created by Dr. Rolundus Rice, assistant vice president of Student Affairs, which is called the "Montgomery to Marion Freshman Pilgrimage." Rice, who will lead Friday's pilgrimage, said that when the ASU’s "2019 President’s Bus Tour" made a stop at Marion High School, ASU officials (Ross, Rice and others) recognized the need for current and future students and alumni to understand the noble history of the University’s founding in Marion.
POIGNANT CEREMONY @ 2 P.M. FRIDAY WITH PRESIDENT ROSS
A very poignant ceremony will take place on Friday at 2 p.m. that will be presided over by ASU President Ross. It will occur near the Phillips Auditorium as the 100-plus ASU freshman will gather vials of soil from ASU's original campus and transport it back to Montgomery as a keepsake and reminder of where the school originated. The once vibrant Marion campus is now closed as a working school, but it is again center-stage to the first-ever ASU Freshman Pilgrimage that occurs Friday between the hours of 11 a.m. and 3 p.m.
Rice remarked that the pilgrimage is to honor the spirit of the nine freed slaves who incorporated Lincoln Normal School (now Alabama State University) with just $500 and 113 students.
"Freshmen will visit the historic Phillips Memorial Auditorium that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and that is one of the few original buildings remaining on the campus site. They also will go to the nearby Lincoln Museum, which displays artifacts and memorabilia related to the school," Rice said.
“This trip to Marion is designed to ensure that every student who graduates from this institution knows relevant information about the nine founders’ rich contributions to the University, to the state of Alabama, and ultimately, to the world,” Rice added.
ASU & LINCOLN NORMAL'S MISSIONS ARE THE SAME
The Lincoln Normal School was founded to provide a quality education for African-American students. Today, 152 years later, ASU’s mission continues to be student-centered and has expanded to include world-class programs in diverse undergraduate and graduate programs that includes several degree-granting colleges and a myriad of majors, which includes doctoral programs, cutting-edge scientific research and much more.
“As we move ASU 150 years forward, we are always reminded of our origins and are thankful for the courageous visionaries known as the Marion Nine,” said ASU's President, Dr. Quinton T. Ross, Jr. “We are proud of the rich heritage of this great institution, and we want all of our students to share in that pride," he added.
Notable alumni of the Lincoln Normal School include Coretta Scott King, civil rights activist and wife of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.; Jean Childs, wife of civil rights activist Ambassador Andrew Young; and Odith Thelma Patton, mother of Bishop T.D. Jakes.
“The historian R.G. Collingwood wrote, ‘The clue to what man can do is what man has already done.’ Our students need to know who Alabama State University has produced, as well as its graduates, and ASU's collective impact on mankind,” Rice said.
Posted By: Reginald Culpepper
Thursday, July 18th 2019 at 7:40PM
You can also
click
here to view all posts by this author...