University of Maryland Eastern Shore

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University of Maryland Eastern Shore
File:UMES seal.png
University of Maryland Eastern Shore seal
Motto Facta, Non Verba
Motto in English
Deeds, Not Words
Type Public, HBCU
Land-grant
Established 1886
President Juliette B. Bell
Vice-president Kimberly C. Dumpson
Provost Patrick Liverpool
Academic staff
310
Undergraduates 3,922
Location , ,
U.S.

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Campus Rural; 1,100 acres
Colors Maroon and Gray
         
Nickname Hawks
Affiliations University System of Maryland
APLU
TMSF
Mascot Harry the Hawk
Website www.umes.edu
UMES Logo
University of Maryland Eastern Shore
File:SSC Rotunda at UMES campus.jpg
Student Services Center Rotunda at the University of Maryland Eastern Shore
University of Maryland Eastern Shore is located in Maryland
University of Maryland Eastern Shore
Location 1 Backbone Rd., Princess Anne, Maryland
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Built 1886
Architect Booth, W. Wilson; Dashiell, J. Roland & Sons, et al.
Architectural style Colonial Revival, Classical Revival, et al.
NRHP Reference # 05001021 [1]
Added to NRHP September 16, 2005

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University of Maryland Eastern Shore (UMES) located on 1,100 acres (4.4515 km²) in Princess Anne, Maryland, United States, is part of the University System of Maryland. UMES is a historically black university, as well as an 1890 Historically Black Land-Grant University. The University is a member-school of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund.

History

UMES is a member of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund

The school was founded in 1886 through the offices of the Delaware Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church and was known as the Delaware Conference Academy. Later UMES came to be called Industrial Branch of Morgan State College and Princess Anne Academy. The State of Maryland, in operating its Land-Grant program at the Maryland Agricultural College at College Park (now the University of Maryland, College Park), which did not admit African American students, sought to provide a Land-Grant program for African Americans. In 1919 the state of Maryland assumed control of the academy and changed its name to Eastern Shore Branch of the Maryland Agricultural College. In 1948 the name was again changed, this time to Maryland State College. In 1970, the university obtained its current name of the University of Maryland Eastern Shore.

From its original campus building known as "Olney," which was constructed in 1798 during the era of President George Washington, the University has grown to over 745 acres with 32 major buildings and 41 other units.[2] The student population has increased to 4,500. Within the last decade, UMES has added 20 degree granting programs to its academic roster.

Academics

The university comprises five schools:

  • School of Agricultural and Natural Sciences
  • School of Arts and Professions
  • School of Business and Technology
  • School of Pharmacy and Health Professions
  • School of Graduate Studies

Signature undergraduate programs are hotel and restaurant management, fashion merchandising, construction management, professional golf management (sanctioned by the PGA), aviation science, and teacher education. Business, criminal justice, and biology are the most popular majors. UMES also has a four-year engineering program.

UMES offers master's degrees in applied computer science, criminology and criminal justice, food and agricultural science, rehabilitation counseling, marine and environmental science, and toxicology. UMES also offers a Master of Education (M.Ed) in career and technology education, special education, and counseling. A Master of Arts in teaching (MAT) in art education, agriculture, biology, business, chemistry, English, family and consumer sciences, math, music, social studies, or technology education is offered through the Department of Education. Beginning in fall 2013 UMES also offers a Master in Medical Science (MMS) in physician assistant studies.

UMES offers doctorates in food science and technology, marine and environmental sciences, toxicology, and organizational leadership. Other terminal degree programs include doctorates in physical therapy (DPT) and educational leadership (EDLD)-- and starting in the fall of 2010, a doctor of pharmacy doctorate (Pharm.D.).

Student life

Athletics

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UMES was one of the founding members of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference in 1970. The school left the MEAC in 1979 but re-joined in 1981 and has been a member ever since. The Hawks compete in 15 sports at the Division I level: seven men's and eight women's. Previous to 1970, UMES was a member of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association in Division II.

The school was once a powerhouse in black college football, producing five undefeated seasons between 1947 and 1960, but like many smaller colleges, the high costs associated with operating a Division I football program and complying with Title IX became too much of a burden, and the team was shut down after the 1979 season. In 1948, the University of Maryland Eastern Shore (UMES) and Albright College played the first intercollegiate football game between an Historical Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) institution and a majority-white institution.[3] In the 2012-13 academic year, President Dr. Juliette B. Bell put together a task force to see if football should be reinstated. On Feb. 28, 2013, the decision was to continue without football, but that the topic "may be revisited" in five years.[4] NFL player and coach Art Shell attended UMES.

UMES is tied with Florida State for the most alumni appearing in a single Super Bowl game. In the 1968 game (Super Bowl III) between the New York Jets and the Baltimore Colts, UMES was represented by five alumni: Earl Christy (1961–1964), Johnny Sample (1954–1957), Emerson Boozer (1962–1965), Charlie Stukes (1963–1967), and James Duncan (1968–1971).

The UMES women's bowling team won the NCAA Bowling Championship in 2012 in Ohio against Fairleigh Dickinson University and in Omaha, Nebraska against Arkansas State University in 2008. They won the series 4-2 (in a best of 7 match). The team was led by All-Tournament players Jessica Worsley (who was named the tournament MVP) and Maria Rodriguez. With the series win, UMES became the first HBCU to win a women's NCAA national championship. The UMES women also won their second 2011 NCAA Bowling Championship in Taylor, Michigan against Vanderbilt University, also winning the series 4-2 (in a best of 7 match). Kristina Frahm (named tournament MVP) and Maria Rodriguez were named to the All-Tournament team en route to their victory. That season, along with the NCAA Championship, UMES also won the USBC Team Championships over Lindenwood University as well as the MEAC Championship. In 2007, the women's bowling team came in 2nd at the NCAA National Championship in Orlando, Florida and fell to Vanderbilt in a 4–3 series. The team was led by All-Tournament players Marion Singleton and Jessica Worsley. The UMES women's bowling team also won the MEAC Championship in 2000, 2006, 2007, and 2008.

UMES men's basketball is coached by Frankie Allen. The school led the nation in scoring during the 1973–1974 season with 97.6 points per game, including future NBA picks Rubin Collins, Talvin Skinner, William Gordon and Joe Pace. The team defeated Manhattan College 84-81 in the first round of the 1974 NIT and fell to Jacksonville University 85-83 in the quarterfinals. The team has never played in the NCAA Division I Men's Basketball Tournament.

During the 2010–11 season, UMES had a men's and women's basketball player surpass the 1,000-career point mark. Hillary Haley passed the mark on the men's side with a 24-point performance against Coppin State on February 19, including his first season at St. Bonaventure. On the women's side, Casey Morton scored 10 points against Savannah State to surpass the mark, finishing with 1,230 in four years with the Lady Hawks. The next season, Adobi Agbasi finished third in Division I in blocks per game with 3.72 per contest, becoming the all-time shot-blocker in UMES women's basketball history with 239 total blocks, achieving that mark on March 1, 2012 against Savannah State|.

In 2011, the Hawks men's outdoor track team was ranked third in the Mid-Atlantic Region by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association, and subsequently was the highest ranked team in the state of Maryland. The following season, three UMES outdoor track athletes earned All-America status: Lenora Guion-Firmin earned First Team in the 400-meter dash, later earning a spot with the French 4x400-meter team in the 2012 Summer Olympics, while Andre Walsh and Vanessa Henry, in the men's 400-meter hurdles and women's shot put, earned Second Team. In 2014, The men's side won the MEAC Cross Country Championships.

The UMES women's volleyball team won its first MEAC championship in the history of the school in November 2011 with a win over Florida A&M in the title game, earning its first NCAA Tournament berth ever. The Hawks fell to eventual national champion UCLA in the first round. In 2012, the team repeated as MEAC champions with another five-set win over Florida A&M to advance to the NCAAs again, falling to 4-seed Nebraska in its first match. The team has won the MEAC Northern Division each of the past six years, combining to go 61-3 in conference regular season matches in that time, plus holds the longest current home-winning streak in Division I, being victorious in its last 30 matches at home.

Notable alumni

Name Class year Notability Reference(s)
David Banner (Lavell Crump) Rapper, studied Master of Education [5]
Emerson Boozer 1965 former NFL player [6]
Roger Brown 1960 former NFL player [7]
Earl Christy 1967 former NFL player [8]
Clarence Clemons Professional saxophonist with Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band [9]
James Duncan former NFL player [10]
Carl Hairston 1975 former NFL player and coach [11]
Merrecia James 2008 track and field middle distance runner from Jamaica, former member of UMES track team, and competed in North American Central American Caribbean (NACAC) cross country meets and world championship cross country meets [12]
Charles Mays 1964 Olympic long jumper and New Jersey State Assemblyman [13]
Earl S. Richardson 1965 Morgan State University President [14]
Johnny Sample 1958 former NFL player [15]
Art Shell 1968 NFL Hall of Fame player and former NFL head coach of the Oakland Raiders and former NFL executive [16]
Ira Smith 1990 former minor league baseball player. He had the highest batting average in Division I in 1989 and 1990. [17]
Charlie Stukes 1967 former NFL player [18]
Billy Thompson 1969 former NFL player [19]
Joe Williams American football player [20]

Notable faculty

References

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  2. University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Somerset County, at Maryland Historical Trust
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  5. http://www.richestlifestyle.com/10-most-educated-rappers/
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External links

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