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No
Ordinary College, history of
UVa-Wise now available
The history of The University of Virginia’s College
at Wise is unique in higher education. In No Ordinary
College, Brian Steel Wills chronicles the uncommon
life of the College, which was founded on a poor farm and
has evolved to become one of the nation’s top public
liberal arts colleges.
“It was
Chancellor Emeritus Joseph C. Smiddy, the man who guided
the College through most of its development, who observed
that Clinch Valley was “never an ordinary College,”
said Wills. “Indeed, it was with this in mind, that
I sought to tell that extraordinary story. It is my hope
that previous, current and future generations of students
and alumni, faculty and staff, friends and supporters of
The University of Virginia’s College at Wise will
be able to use this book to better understand and appreciate
that story.”
Published for
the College’s 50th anniversary by the University of
Virginia Press, No Ordinary College is essential
reading for the College’s alumni, faculty and staff,
and anyone interested in a heroic chapter in the history
of public higher education in Virginia. Chapter titles hint
at the interesting stories contained in No Ordinary
College. “’From Poor Farm’ to ‘The
College on the Hill;’ ““The Barnyard Disappears;”
and “Peace in the Valley” are just a sampling
of the stories inside.
“The narrative
is well-known in Southwest Virginia, of the fateful meeting
on a blustery evening in the Colonial Inn at Wise, of the
three Wise men who traveled to Charlottesville to meet with
University President Colgate Darden, of their race to Richmond
to secure $10,000 for the first biennium from the Virginia
General Assembly, and of a community of people who labored
to renovate and outfit the building that became known as
Crockett Hall after the first director of the College, Samuel
R. Crockett.,” Wills said. “These efforts brought
higher education to the coalfields region and changed the
lives of so many students forever.”
A nationally recognized
Civil War historian, Wills is the author of two books, The
War Hits Home: The Civil War in Southeastern Virginia
and A Battle From the Start: The Life of Nathan Bedford
Forrest, along with numerous scholarly articles, essays,
and book reviews. Additionally, he is a weekly columnist
for the Kingsport Times-News. Wills’ latest
work, an examination of the Civil War in film, will be published
next year.
The Kenneth Asbury
Professor of History, Wills is the 2000 recipient of the
Outstanding Faculty Award presented by the State Council
of Higher Education for Virginia. He also received the UVa-Wise
Outstanding Teaching Award in 1998 and the Outstanding Research
Award in 1995.
“In many
ways completing the history of The University of Virginia’s
College at Wise has truly been a labor of love,” Wills
said. “I came to the institution, then known as Clinch
Valley College in 1992, after being absolutely taken by
the place and its people in the interview process that previous
spring. I was fortunate to find a home in a department that
still called upon the services of campus stalwarts like
Edward L. “Buck” Henson and Stanley Willis.
Much of my affection for the school came from the stories
I heard from those individuals, and from Joe Smiddy, the
most amazing man it has been my pleasure to come to know.”
No Ordinary
College is available in the UVa-Wise Campus Bookstore
located in the C. Bascom Slemp Student Center.
For more information,
contact the Office of College Relations at 276-328-0130.
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