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Hendrix Celebrates 125 Years in Conway (Rain Location: Reves Recital Hall)

CONWAY, Ark. (April 15, 2016) – Hendrix College will celebrate the 125th anniversary of its move from Altus to Conway, Arkansas, today Friday, April 15, at 3 p.m., in Reves Recital Hall.

[Please note the original location was changed from Simon Park to Reves Recital Hall in the Trieschmann Fine Arts Building on the Hendrix campus due to the forecast for rain; also note that there will NOT be a parade from Simon Park to the Hendrix campus ]

The program will feature Hendrix President Bill Tsutsui, Altus Mayor Veronica Post, Conway Mayor Tab Townsell, Conway Corp. CEO Richie Arnold, Conway Area Chamber of Commerce CEO Brad Lacy, and Bishop Gary E. Mueller, episcopal leader of the Arkansas Conference of the United Methodist Church. The Hendrix Wind Ensemble will also perform.

Following a brief program, Hendrix students will perform an anniversary-inspired tableau and offer historic campus tours.

For more information, contact Rob O’Connor, Associate Vice President for Marketing Communications, at 501-450-1462.

Historical Background

Hendrix was founded in 1876 as Central Institute by Rev. Isham Burrow in Altus (Franklin County). Five years later, the name was changed to Central Collegiate Institute.

In 1884, the institution joined the Arkansas Conference of the United Methodist Church (then called the Methodist Episcopal Church, South).

In 1889, it was renamed Hendrix College in honor of Bishop Eugene Russell Hendrix, presiding bishop of the Arkansas Conference. A year later, Conway was one of seven Arkansas communities competing for Hendrix.

Early Conway civic leaders as Capt. W. W. Martin and the Rev. E. A. Tabor were instrumental in Conway’s bid to get Hendrix. Rev. Tabor worked to rid the city of its five saloons and Capt. Martin worked to raise $72,000, which included $11,000 he donated himself.

In the spring of 1890, Capt. Martin, the Rev. Tabor, and several other civic leaders arrived in Conway, where the business district was decorated with flags and banners, to tell an excited crowd of shouting citizens that Conway had won the College.

Hendrix College, its five faculty members, and 158 students moved to Conway in the summer of 1890 and the first academic year commenced that fall. The college property included school records and supplies, a library of some 500 books, and a small amount of scientific apparatus, maps, charts and a globe.

About Hendrix College

Hendrix College is a private liberal arts college in Conway, Arkansas. Founded in 1876 and affiliated with the United Methodist Church since 1884, Hendrix is featured in Colleges That Change Lives: 40 Schools That Will Change the Way You Think about Colleges and is nationally recognized in numerous college guides, lists, and rankings for academic quality, community, innovation, and value. For more information, visit www.hendrix.edu.