Penn State Mont Alto

Penn State Mont Alto
Former names
Pennsylvania State Forest Academy
Type Public
Established 1903
Parent institution
Pennsylvania State University
Chancellor Francis K. Achampong[1]
President Eric J. Barron
Undergraduates 1,204
Location Mont Alto, Pennsylvania, United States
Campus Rural area
Nickname Nittany Lions
Affiliations PSUAC (USCAA)
Website www.ma.psu.edu

Penn State Mont Alto is a Pennsylvania State University Commonwealth Campus. It is located in Mont Alto, in south central Pennsylvania, between Chambersburg and Gettysburg. It incorporates the Pennsylvania State Forest Academy, founded in 1903 by Governor Samuel W. Pennypacker.

Institution

Approximately 1,200 students attend the school with more than 30% being over the age of 24. The majority of the student population at Penn State Mont Alto commute to classes, rather than live in the provided residence halls.

The campus is well known for its forestry and nursing majors. While many students elect to continue their education at University Park, Penn State Mont Alto does offer four-year degrees in business as well as English.

Today, Mont Alto offers four baccalaureate degrees and eight associate degrees, and serves nearly 1,300 students annually. The campus serves an additional 2,500 annually through its Continuing Education unit, with courses on campus, at the Chambersburg Mall and other sites.

History

Pennsylvania State Forest Academy

Joseph Rothrock, an explorer, botanist and medical doctor founded the academy to train men for service in the state forests.

In May 1903, Samuel W. Pennypacker, governor of Pennsylvania, established the Pennsylvania State Forest Academy in Mont Alto. With the precipitous closure of the New York State College of Forestry at Cornell in the same month, the new Pennsylvania school became one of three forestry schools in the nation, along with Yale and Biltmore. George Wirt, the academy's first administrator, patterned the curriculum after curricula in Germany. All first year students were required to bring a horse with them to the academy until the late 1920s. The horses were used to fight forest fires in the Michaux State Forest.[2][3]

The yearbook of the Pennsylvania State Forest Academy was called "The Oak Leaf". It was published in 1914, 1920, 1923 and 1927, and may now be viewed online through the Pennsylvania State University Libraries along with other items documenting the history of this campus.[4]

Merger with Penn State

In 1929 the Forest Academy merged with Pennsylvania State University, establishing Penn State Mont Alto. Students were adamantly opposed to the merger, and they protested by hanging two state officials in effigy.[2]

The campus closed from 1943 to 1946 because the students and faculty were fighting in WWII.[2]

In 1963, Penn State Mont Alto became a Commonwealth Campus.

In 1997, Mont Alto joined the Commonwealth College, and began to offer baccalaureate degrees.

Overview of the campus

Residence halls

Penn State Mont Alto offers three residence halls to students: Mont Alto Hall, Penn Gate I, and Penn Gate II.

Classroom buildings

Other notable buildings

Athletics

Penn State–Mont Alto teams participate as a member of the United States Collegiate Athletic Association (USCAA). The Nittany Lions are a member of the Pennsylvania State University Athletic Conference (PSUAC). Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, golf, soccer, tennis and wrestling; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, softball, tennis and volleyball.

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pennsylvania State University.

Coordinates: 39°50′32″N 77°32′33″W / 39.842261°N 77.542534°W / 39.842261; -77.542534

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 6/15/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.