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Midway
College, Kentucky's only women's college, provides a
living, learning environment that enables students to
assume roles of responsibility and leadership as contemporary
women. The college assists each student in the development
of personal integration and self sufficiency through
a strong liberal arts education and through career studies,
both at the associate and baccalaureate degree levels.
The
college seeks to serve the larger community by educating
women intellectually, morally, and spiritually to be
productive participants in society, responsible citizens
in a democracy, and conservators and reformers of the
best elements of their culture.
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The
college further seeks to assist both women and men who
are employed and of non-traditional college age to earn
undergraduate degrees. The institution that has become
Midway College was established in 1847 to prepare financially
disadvantaged young women for teaching careers. The
intensive schooling and career training available at
Midway armed these women with the skills necessary for
independence.
Midway
College, formerly the Kentucky Female Orphan School
was the brainchild of Dr. Lewis Letig Pinkerton, a young
physician and minister of the Christian Church (Disciples
of Christ). Together with James Ware Parrish, the church
elder who raised the funds necessary to open the school,
they joined with other progressive thinkers to launch
a revolutionary educational experiment.
In antebellum
Kentucky, the few girls who received formal education
were taught to read only because it was considered necessary
for their role as mothers. When they reached adulthood,
they would read the Bible to their children. Female
orphans were rarely offered even this meager amount
of schooling. Without education or parental support
and concern, the most many could hope for was a lifetime
of drudgery as a maid or laborer. The liberal arts curriculum
and career preparation proposed by Dr. Pinkerton was
a comprehensive solution to this tragic situation, and
the benefits reached far beyond the individual girls
who attended the school. Dr. Pinkerton’s dream became
a reality as Midway-educated teachers went forth to
share their learning with youngsters throughout the
state and region.
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In the
years since its inception, the institution has evolved
to meet the educational needs of women while preserving
the goals and standards of its founders. Today, Midway
College has achieved its goal of excellence in education,
providing advanced instruction in a broad range of subjects
based upon a strong liberal arts curriculum.
The
campus and programs have grown with the school’s enrollment,
yet many of the traditional ideals Midway was founded
on have remained constant. The college's affiliation
with the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) remains
strong and many members of the student body are active
members of Christian Church congregations.
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Today,
the Midway College curriculum includes subjects recognized
as integral to a well-rounded liberal arts education
and the development of logical and critical thinking.
Career preparation is offered in a variety of fields
including nursing and equine management. This academic
balance remains true to Dr. Pinkerton's vision, and
is as carefully structured to enrich today's student
as was the original curriculum in pre-Civil War times.
Just as programs of study have been incorporated into
the Midway College curriculum to meet the ever-changing
needs of students, many programs are structured for
the convenience of the growing number of returning and
commuter students, as well as for residential students
of traditional age.
Midway
College continues to fulfill a unique role in the education
of contemporary women. It provides an avenue for women
to gain a quality education, achieve independence through
career preparation and strive for intellectual enlightenment.
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