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© Acadia University
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Motto: In pulvere vinces (Latin: "In dust, you will win")
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| Founded | 1838
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| School type | Public
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| President
| Gail Dinter-Gottlieb
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| Location
| Wolfville, Nova Scotia
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| Enrollment (2004)
| 3894 full-time students, undergraduate and graduate
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| Campus surroundings
| Town
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| Sports teams
| Axemen and Axewomen
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Acadia University is a
university located in
Wolfville, Nova Scotia,
Canada. It began as Horton Academy (
1828), which was founded by
Baptists from Nova Scotia. The two major Universities of the day in Nova Scotia were heavily controlled by Denominational structures. King's College (
University of King's College) was an
Anglican School and
Dalhousie University, which was originally non-denominational, had placed itself under the control and direction of the
Church of Scotland. It was the failure of Dalhousie to appoint a prominent Baptist pastor and scholar, Edmund Crawley, to the Chair of
Classics, as had been expected, that really thrust into the forefront of Baptist thinking the need for a College established and run by the Baptists.
In 1838, the Nova Scotia Baptist Education Society founded Queen's College (named for Queen Victoria). The College began with 21 students in January 1839. The name "Queen's College" was denied to the Baptist school, so it was renamed "Acadia College" in 1841, in reference to the history of the area as an Acadian settlement. It became a university in 1891.
The Granville Street Baptist Church (now First Baptist Church Halifax ) was an instrumental and determining factor in the founding of the University. It has played a supporting role throughout its history, and shares much of the credit for its survival and development. "Together, we should feel a great sense of pride in what we have built," said former AU President Dr. Kelvin Ogilvie in some remarks to the congregation on April 16, 2000.
In marking the 50th anniversary of the latest church building, Dr. Ogilvie delivered a fitting tribute to the congregation. Many members are graduates of Acadia University and have been associated with the Acadia Divinity College. "This unique relationship between Acadia Divinity College and Acadia University is an important one; one which we must work to preserve," commented Dr. Ogilvie.
Many individuals who have made significant contributions to Acadia University, including the first president John Pryor , were members of the First Baptist Church Halifax congregation.
The original charter as a College stated:
And be it further enacted, that no religious tests or subscriptions shall be required of the Professors Fellows, Scholars, Graduates or Officers of the said College; but that all the privileges and advantages thereof shall be open and free to all and every Person and Persons whomsoever, without regard to religious persuasion... And it shall and may be lawful for the trustees and Governors of the said College to select as Professors, and other Teaches or Officers, competent persons of any religious persuasion whatever, provided such person or persons shall be of moral and religious character.
This was unique at the time, and a direct result of Baptists being denied entry into other schools that required religious tests of their students and staff.
As of 2005, Acadia has approximately 4,000 students. Some would consider Acadia University's most outstanding factor to be its Acadia Advantage programme. The initiative (which was unique in Canada for several years after beginning in 1996) integrates the use of laptop computers, which are loaned to all students, into the undergraduate curriculum. Acadia also has the highest tuition in Canada, in part because of the additional fees students must pay to participate in the Acadia Advantage programme.
As of 2005, Acadia's president is Gail Dinter-Gottlieb ; she took on her position after the retirement of past president Kelvin Ogilvie in 2003. In February and March of 2004, Acadia experienced its first ever strike by the faculty. Professors and librarians were off the job for two weeks before they reached a settlement.
The university is also home to the Baptist Seminary Acadia Divinity College.
Acadia's sports teams are called the Axemen and Axewomen. They participate in the Atlantic University Sports conference of Canadian Interuniversity Sport.
External link
See also Acadia Students' Union