History
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With a new location came a new name, Emmanuel Missionary College (EMC). There was much work to be done as the new school had no buildings. For the 1901-1902 school year, the college rented a barn, the former Berrien County courthouse, an office building, a jail and a sheriff's residence to serve as temporary school buildings. Construction of the new school
started almost immediately. All buildings were built from wood as brick was perceived to be too permanent for those expecting the imminent return of Jesus. Early buildings were built almost entirely by students. Faculty also became involved with helping to get things underway in Berrien Springs. EMC's first president, E.A. Sutherland, felt inspired to plant a long row of Norway spruce trees to help landscape the new school. The tall row of trees stands proud today, over a hundred years later, a testimony to the hands-on attitude of our school's pioneers.
As EMC began to establish itself in the community, students and faculty developed a deep interest in overseas missionary work. By the 1920s, mission fervor had become one of the defining features of the Andrews experience. Despite the Depression of the 1930s, the Andrews leadership was successful as they worked to arrange accreditation for the institution. Amazingly, during the difficult war years of the 1940s, the college was able to obtain the materials and permission to build a new administration building, Nethery Hall, now home to the College of Arts & Sciences.
Momentum was growing and in 1959 Washington D.C.-based Potomac University moved to Berrien Springs and merged with EMC, bringing with it a School of Graduate Studies and the Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary. The combined institutions were chartered as Andrews University the very next year, establishing a leader in higher education for the Seventh-day Adventist Church.
In 1974, the undergraduate division of Andrews was organized into two colleges—the College of Arts & Sciences and the College of Technology. The School of Business Administration, which evolved from the Department of Business Administration, was established in 1980. In a similar move, the Department of Education became the School of Education in 1983. In 1993, the Department of Architecture became the Division of Architecture, and is now the School of Architecture. The present organizational structure of the School of Graduate Studies was adopted in 1987. All of the colleges and schools offer both undergraduate and graduate degrees. The Seventh-day Adventist Theological Seminary maintains graduate and professional programs only.
The only Seventh-day Adventist doctoral research university, Andrews University is also a comprehensive institution of higher learning, integrating an exemplary liberal arts and sciences core with five powerful professional schools and several excellent graduate programs.
Today, Andrews is the most prominent university in Adventism. More than 3400 students study here, representing most U.S. states and nearly 100 countries. Another 3000 students study at affiliate campuses around the world. We offer approximately 130 undergraduate programs and 70 graduate programs.