You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles
YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.
Curtis Administration Building<br />
<strong>Limestone</strong> College was established in 1845 by Dr. Thomas Curtis and his son, Dr. William<br />
Curtis, distinguished scholars born and educated in England. <strong>Limestone</strong> College was the first<br />
woman’s college in South Carolina and one of the first in the United States.<br />
In the late 1960s, <strong>Limestone</strong> College became fully coeducational. The campus is a unique<br />
combination of history and progress, with nine of our campus buildings included on the<br />
National Register of Historic Places. Since 1991,<br />
<strong>Limestone</strong> College has completed renovations of seven of<br />
its historic campus structures: the Montgomery Classroom<br />
Building, Ebert Residence Hall, Carroll Fine Arts Building,<br />
Hamrick Hall of Science, Eunice Ford Residence Hall, and<br />
Dixie Lodge Student Center. While the College’s ties to<br />
the past are visible in the many historic structures, these<br />
renovated facilities now house the modern technology<br />
necessary to maintain <strong>Limestone</strong>’s reputation as an<br />
outstanding liberal arts college.<br />
Dixie Lodge Dixie Lodge<br />
<strong>Limestone</strong> College is an accredited, independent, coeducational, four-year liberal arts<br />
institution chartered by the state of South Carolina. <strong>Limestone</strong> is a non-denominational<br />
Christian college. Our programs lead to a Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science,<br />
Bachelor of Social Work, or Associate of Arts degree.<br />
Today, <strong>Limestone</strong> College enrolls<br />
approximately 600 students in its day<br />
program and approximately 2,000 in the<br />
Block Program (located at various sties<br />
throughout South Carolina) and Virtual<br />
Campus Program (Internet Courses)<br />
combined.<br />
23 SAINTS SOCCER