Whitworth Female CollegeWhitworth Female College was a Methodist women's college in Brookhaven, Mississippi, founded in 1858 by Milton Whitworth. It is a Mississippi Landmark. HistoryThe college was founded in 1858[1] by Milton J. Whitworth,[2] opened in 1859,[3] and disestablished in 1984.[1] It was associated with the Mississippi Methodist Conference until 1938.[4] During the Civil War the college was used as a Confederate hospital and managed to reopen after the war's end.[2] In August 1878, local freemasons laid the cornerstone for a new brick building at the college, into which a time capsule was placed. Both U.S. Senator from Mississippi Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar II and Jefferson Davis were expected to attend the ceremony but were "unavoidably absent."[5] In 1925 the College was first accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.[4] In 1928 the College began operation as a two-year institution associated with Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi.[4] In 1938, because of financial difficulties, the board of trustees of the College voted to cease operations and merge the school with Millsaps College.[4] The city of Brookhaven bought the campus and leased it out to various short-lived colleges between 1941 and 1984, when all educational operations at the location ceased.[4] In 2003 the state of Mississippi opened the Mississippi School of the Arts on the grounds of the former college.[6] Vardaman's visitDuring his term as Governor of Mississippi (1904-1908), white supremacist politician James Kimble Vardaman, known as the "Great White Chief," spoke at the college and was presented with a bouquet and the following poem:
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