History of the Campus' Name
Are we a Campus? A College? A Center? The C.W. Post
Campus of Long Island University has truly had an interesting history
of name changes. So we sat down with Vice President Mary Lai, who
has been with the University for 60+ years, to help us sort out
the history of our name.
In 1947, Long Island University put a deposit down
on the Mrs. Joseph E. Davies (Marjorie Merriweather Post Close Hutton
Davies) estate in Brookville. In anticipation of eventually opening
a campus on the estate, Long Island University began offering classes
in nearby Hicksville High School and Oyster Bay High School. The
Nassau County locations were not officially named but were referred
to as the off-campus locations of Long Island University.
In 1951, Long Island University began offering evening
courses in Mrs. Post's mansion. This site was called the Brookville Branch of Long Island University. In 1952, Long Island University
added a day session, but it only lasted for one semester: the acting
president William Marion Hudson, did not think it could be a success
because there were little funds to keep it running.
C.W. Post College
Evening classes continued to run from 1951 to 1954
at the Brookville branch until it had a name change in 1954. C.W.
Post was officially founded in November 1954 and was christened
C.W. Post College of Long Island University. "College"
was chosen because our first school of study was the College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Our founding fathers, especially then president
of Long Island University Admiral Richard L. Connolly, opened C.
W. Post with the intention of creating an elite, but small, liberal
arts college similar to Dartmouth or Amherst. He never dreamed that
the school would grow to have six schools of study.
Incidentally, we named the college after Mrs. Post's
father, Charles William Post. Grover Whalen, Long Island University
trustee and a personal friend of Marjorie Post, proposed that the
new campus by named for her father to help establish a strong identity
for the Universitys new location. In addition, Whalen and
other university officials hoped this sentimental gesture would
motivate Marjorie to become a major benefactress of the newly found
campus. She donated more than $2 million to the campus and would
often visit the campus to participate in various activities such
as football games, sorority dinners and commencement exercises.
Mitchel College
In 1954, Long Island University's Brooklyn Campus
began offering courses to military personnel and their families
at Mitchel Field Air Force Base in Hempstead. About 1958, the site
was officially named Mitchel
College of Long Island University. In 1963, when the federal
government closed the Air Force Base, it deeded the property to
the University for educational usage. The University operated for
a short time, but closed Mitchel College because it lacked enrollment.
The remaining students were offered a choice of completing their
degrees at either the C.W. Post Campus or the Brooklyn Campus. One
program, however remained at the former Mitchel College site until
the mid 1970's. It was a Marine and Environmental Science Program,
which was considered an extension program of C.W. Post.
In 1965 the Long Island University Board of Trustees
decided to change the names of all the campuses: C.W. Post College
was changed to The Merriweather Campus (after Marjorie Post's
mother Ella Merriweather Post); the Brooklyn Campus became The Zeckendorf
Campus (after its first president, William Zeckendorf, Sr.); and
Southampton was named the Southampton Campus.
In 1969, for continuity among each of LIU's campuses,
the campuses' names were changed to Centers. When the Brentwood,
Rockland and Westchester Campuses opened they were called Branches
of the C.W. Post Center and Brooklyn Center.
Then in 1980, all six units of Long Island University
were changed to Campus. We remained consistent for several
years until 1995, when Southampton changed from a Campus to a College.
To this day C.W. Post and Brooklyn remain Campuses.
Mrs. Lai noted that the variety of changes in our
names was a result of changes of leadership, ranging from new presidents
of the University to new board chairmen.
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