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10

The Bluefield College School of Nursing RN-BSN program is granted accreditation

by the Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE) for a period of five years,

from November 2013 until November 2018.  CCNE is recognized by the Department of

Education and is a specialized/professional accrediting agency that strives to ensure the

quality and integrity of baccalaureate and graduate nursing programs.  CCNE accreditation

evaluation reviews the program mission, goals, and expected outcomes; and an assessment

of the performance of the program.

The College has been approved for veteran compensation. Bluefield College

has professional memberships in many nationally prestigious organizations. These

organizations are listed on p. 11.

THE HISTORY OF BLUEFIELD COLLEGE

In 1919, the Baptist General Association of Virginia appointed a committee to study

the need for a junior college in southwestern Virginia. The committee met in Bristol in

August of that year, at which time a large group of citizens from Bluefield and vicinity

came before the committee and generously offered $75,000 and 65 acres of land if the

BGAV would locate the proposed college in Bluefield. The BGAV accepted, and Bluefield

College opened its doors to students seeking Christian higher education in 1922.

Dr. R.A. Lansdell served as the first president. During his administration, he assembled

the first faculty, erected the first buildings and actively solicited funds for the college. Dr.

Oscar E. Sams assumed the task of president in 1927. Under his guidance, the college

developed its first summer school program and a new Aviation Department. Dr. Sams also

brought accreditation to BC through the American Association of Junior Colleges and the

State Board of Education.

Dr. J. Taylor Stinson assumed the presidency in 1930 and launched a Department of

Business Administration and a new engineering program. In the fall of 1934, Dr. Edwin C.

Wade took over the presidency, and under his leadership enrollment grew to an all–time

high of 306 students. FollowingWorldWar II, enrollment reached even greater proportions,

including some 468 veterans.

President Charles L. Harman engineered the school’s most notable growth during his

tenure as president from 1946 to 1971. Under Dr. Harman, BC gained national prominence

with its strong Christian stands and its decision to refuse government aid on the basis of

separation of church and state. Dr. Harman organized the school’s first ever fundraising

campaign and the construction of several campus facilities: Easley Library (1956), Rish

Hall Girls’ Dormitory (1960), Harman Chapel (1965), and The Dome Gymnasium (1968).

Under Dr. Harman, the college also implemented residential co–educational status, opened

its first night school program, and obtained accreditation from the Southern Association of

Colleges and Schools.

Dr. Charles L. Tyer became president in 1972. His most notable accomplishment was

leading BC to accreditation as a four–year college. Following a two–year self-study, BC

began to offer baccalaureate degrees in 1975, accredited by the Southern Association of

Colleges and Schools (SACS).

Dr. Roy A. Dobyns assumed the presidency in 1989 and led the college in its most

notable era of student growth. From 1989 to 1995, enrollment at BC more than doubled to

an all–time high of 853. Under Dr. Dobyns, the College also launched its largest fundraising

effort in history, the 75th Anniversary Campaign.

Dr. Dan MacMillan began his tenure as president in 1997. During his tenure, BC built