For more than a hundred years, Trevecca Nazarene University has been meeting the educational needs of students. From its earliest beginnings in 1901 as a pastor's training class for Christian workers to its modern role as a university, Trevecca's focus has been to provide higher education within the context of a Christian community.
The following is a brief history of important events in the history of Trevecca.
1901
The Reverend J. O. McClurkan, a Cumberland Presbyterian minister, began teaching a small group of parishioners who wanted to be more effective Christian workers. That group grew, and later that year McClurkan announced the establishment of the Literary and Bible Training School for Christian Workers.
1911
The curriculum was enlarged and the name changed to Trevecca College, a name taken from an institution started in Wales in 1768 during the Wesleyan revival. This school was located on part of what is now the Ryman Auditorium property in downtown Nashville.
1914
The College was moved from downtown Nashville to a site on Gallatin Road in East Nashville.
1917
Trevecca became an official college of the Church of the Nazarene.
1935
Trevecca was established at its present location on Murfreesboro Road in southeast Nashville.
1942
Trevecca graduated its first four-year class.
1969
Trevecca earned accreditation from Southern Association of Schools.
1984
Master's degree programs in education were added.
1987
Master's degrees in religion were added.
1987
Trevecca began the Management and Human Relations Program, Middle Tennessee's first degree-completion program. Tennessee.
1992
Master's degrees in organizational management were added.
1995
The Board of Trustees voted to change the name of Trevecca Nazarene College to Trevecca Nazarene University.
1999
The doctorate in education (EdD) was added.
2007
A second doctorate was added, the EdD in clinical counseling.
2011
Trevecca offered its first PhD after the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools approved making the EdD in clinical counseling a PhD.
The University published two books of Trevecca's history. The Trevecca Story, by Mildred Wynkoop, covers the years from 1901 to 1976; it was published in honor of Trevecca's 75th anniversary. In 2001, Trevecca's centennial year, the University published a centennial history; A Vine of God's Own Choosing, by John F. Chilton, recounts Trevecca's history from 1976 to 2001.