Mississippi Industrial College — A Bishop’s College, Closed Across the Road From the One That Outlived It
Summary
Mississippi Industrial College, founded in 1905 in Holly Springs, Mississippi, by Bishop Elias Cottrell of the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church, closed in 1982 after losing its candidate status for accreditation in December 1981 and exhausting the finances of a small Black college that desegregation had been draining for two decades. For seventy-seven years it had stood on a hilltop directly across North Memphis Street from Rust College — two historically Black colleges facing each other across a road in a small north Mississippi town — and educated Black Mississippians in trades, teaching, and the ministry through the hardest years of segregation. When it closed, Holly Springs kept one of its two HBCUs and lost the other; today Mississippi Industrial College's grand brick buildings, several of them on the National Register, stand vacant or in ruin while Rust College, its lifelong neighbor, continues.
What the college built was substantial and is too easily forgotten now that the buildings are falling. Bishop Cottrell, born into slavery in 1853, founded the college to give African Americans in segregated Mississippi a practical and a liberal education and to make, in his words, better citizens; the first session opened in January 1906 with two hundred students, and enrollment reached roughly 450 by 1908. Over the following decades it raised a campus of monumental brick buildings — Catherine Hall, Hammond Hall, and Washington Hall, designed by the firm of Heavener and McGhee, and, in 1923, the Carnegie Auditorium by the pioneering Black architectural firm McKissack and McKissack, a 2,000-seat hall described as the largest space built by and for Black people in the state. The college trained teachers for Mississippi's segregated Black schools, ministers for the CME Church, and tradesmen for a region that gave its Black citizens few other doors.
The decline was the bitter, paradoxical kind that befell many of the smaller HBCUs: the end of legal segregation, the great victory, removed the captive enrollment on which the college had depended. As Mississippi's community colleges and formerly all-white institutions opened to Black students through the 1960s and 1970s, a small private college with high costs and a narrow base could no longer compete for the students who now had cheaper, nearer, better-funded options. Enrollment fell; finances tightened; and in December 1981 the institution lost its candidacy for accreditation — the gate to federal student aid. A reported restoration of eligibility in 1982 came too late to matter. The college closed that year, in its seventy-seventh, and the campus it left behind — several buildings on the National Register since 1980 — has since been a study in slow loss: Catherine Hall demolished after a 2012 storm, Washington Hall all but collapsed, the great Carnegie Auditorium compromised. What remains is a ruin of real consequence: the physical record of a bishop's determination, in 1905, that Black Mississippians would have a college of their own.
Timeline
A Bishop's Determination
Mississippi Industrial College was the work of one man's conviction and a church's resolve. Elias Cottrell was born into slavery in Mississippi in 1853; he rose to become the seventh bishop of the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church, and he believed his people in segregated Mississippi needed a college that was their own — one that would, as the founding vision had it, inculcate Christian ideals, provide a practical education, and make better citizens. In 1905 he established the college on a hilltop in Holly Springs, on a 120-acre tract, and placed it deliberately across North Memphis Street from Rust College, the older Methodist HBCU founded in 1866. The two schools would face each other across that road for the next seventy-seven years, neighbors and rivals, the CME college and the Methodist Episcopal one.
The institution grew quickly into the role Cottrell intended. The first session opened in January 1906; by that May some two hundred students had enrolled, and by 1908 the number had reached roughly 450 — the high-water mark, drawn overwhelmingly from Mississippi. The college built to last, and built with ambition. Catherine Hall and Hammond Hall, the early brick dormitories, went up in 1906 and 1907 to designs by Heavener and McGhee of Jackson, Tennessee, in a Jacobean Revival idiom of curved parapets and projecting pavilions; Washington Hall, the classroom and administration building, followed in 1910. The crowning structure came in 1923: the Carnegie Auditorium, funded by a matching grant from Andrew Carnegie's foundation and designed by McKissack and McKissack of Nashville — one of the first Black-owned architectural firms in the country — a 2,000-seat hall remembered as the largest auditorium built by and for African Americans in the state of Mississippi.
For its strongest decades the college did exactly what a Black college in segregated Mississippi existed to do. It trained teachers for the state's separate and unequal Black schools, sending out the educators on whom an entire community's literacy depended. It prepared ministers for the CME Church. It taught the trades — auto mechanics, home economics, commercial subjects — that opened the few skilled livelihoods available to Black Mississippians under Jim Crow. Long stewardships gave it stability: W. M. Frazier led it from 1933 through 1955, across the Depression and the war; Dr. E. E. Rankin held the presidency from 1957 to 1978. A student at Mississippi Industrial in those years was getting something the state of Mississippi was otherwise determined to deny: a path, through a college of one's own, into the dignity of an educated and useful life.
The Cruel Arithmetic of Victory
The force that undid Mississippi Industrial College was not failure but progress — the dismantling of the segregation that had, perversely, guaranteed it students. For most of its history the college had drawn on a captive enrollment: Black Mississippians who, barred from the state's white colleges and its segregated community colleges, attended the institutions built for them. When the civil-rights movement broke that system through the 1960s and into the 1970s, and Mississippi's public community colleges and formerly all-white universities opened their doors to Black students, the captive base dissolved. A young Black Mississippian who once had little choice but a private HBCU now had public options that were cheaper, often closer, and far better funded by the state.
This is the cruel arithmetic that closed a number of the smaller HBCUs after desegregation, and it bears stating with care, because it is so easily mistaken for decline through neglect. The colleges were not failing their students; the legal world that had funneled students to them was, rightly, being torn down. But a small private college with a tuition-dependent budget, an aging campus that demanded constant upkeep, and no significant endowment could not absorb the loss of enrollment that followed — and two private HBCUs facing each other across one road was one more than the post-segregation market in Holly Springs could sustain. Through the 1970s the numbers fell and the finances tightened, the late-1970s renovation campaign notwithstanding.
The decisive blow, as so often in this encyclopedia, came through accreditation. In December 1981 the college lost its candidate status for accreditation — the formal standing that is the precondition for federal student aid. For a college whose students depended on that aid, the loss was very nearly fatal on its own: without it, enrolling and paying became impossible for much of the student body the college had left. A restoration of eligibility reportedly came in 1982, but by then the institution had run out of both money and time. The candidacy lost in December and the finances already exhausted, Mississippi Industrial College could not open another full year. It closed in 1982, seventy-seven years after a bishop born in slavery had founded it.
The Ruin and the Road
The end was quiet, as the ends of small colleges usually are, and it left a particular kind of wound on a small town. Holly Springs had been, improbably, a two-college town for African Americans — a place where, across a single road, stood two of the institutions that had carried Black education through segregation. After 1982 it had one. Rust College continued; Mississippi Industrial did not, and the loss of a historically Black college falls most heavily on the community it served, where the college had been not merely a school but a source of teachers, ministers, jobs, and pride. The students of the final years had to find their way to other institutions; the faculty and staff lost their places; and the CME Church lost the college its seventh bishop had built as a monument to the conviction that his people deserved one.
The campus has decayed in full public view, a slow erosion punctuated by losses. The historical recognition came early and, in retrospect, poignantly: the National Register of Historic Places listed the campus as a historic district in 1980, while the college still held classes — honoring the architecture two years before the institution that built it would close. An alumni association organized in 1999 to fight the deterioration of the great brick halls, and in 2008 Rust College — the neighbor across North Memphis Street — acquired the property in an effort to preserve it. But the stabilization funding such a rescue requires has never materialized. Storm damage forced the demolition of Catherine Hall, one of the original 1906 dormitories, in 2012; Washington Hall has all but collapsed; the Carnegie Auditorium, that monument to Black aspiration, stands compromised, its floor partly fallen in. Hammond Hall, the best-preserved of the buildings, even served for a time as quarters for the Holly Springs police. What endures, fragile and roofless in places, is the most literal kind of historical record: the physical evidence that in 1905, in Holly Springs, Mississippi, a man born enslaved built Black Mississippians a college, and that for seventy-seven years it stood.
The Five Factors
Aftermath
The students and staff of Mississippi Industrial's final years scattered into a Mississippi that, by then, offered Black students the public options the college's closure made necessary — a small mercy that does not undo the displacement of a community's own institution. The CME Church lost the college its founder had built; Holly Springs lost half of a singular two-college Black educational heritage; and a town that had been a center of Black learning since Reconstruction kept only the older of its two HBCUs. The closure was not the spectacular collapse of a scandal-ridden institution but the quiet exhaustion of a college that desegregation had slowly emptied — and that quietness is its own comment on how the smaller Black colleges were allowed to disappear.
The buildings have carried the memory, and have been steadily losing the fight. Rust College — the neighbor that outlived its rival — now holds the ground, and the surviving halls stand as ruins of real meaning across the road from the living campus. Mississippi Industrial College's fate is, in the end, the fate of those buildings: a monument to Black aspiration in segregated Mississippi, raised by a bishop born enslaved, weathering toward loss while the institution it housed lives only in its alumni and its place on a historic register.
Lessons
- Understand that the end of legal segregation, an unambiguous good, nonetheless removed the captive enrollment that sustained the smaller HBCUs — and that diagnosing that mechanism honestly is not nostalgia for the system that created it.
- Recognize that a region or town can support only so many tuition-dependent private colleges once students gain public alternatives; proximity to a stronger neighbor accelerates, rather than cushions, a small college's decline.
- Build reserves the campus can fall back on — a tuition-funded college with monumental buildings and no endowment cannot meet fixed costs through a sustained enrollment drop, and the maintenance bill does not shrink with the student body.
- Treat accreditation candidacy as the lifeline it is: its loss cuts off the federal aid that poorer students depend on, and the time required to regain standing can outrun the money required to stay open.
- Fund preservation, not just recognition — a National Register listing honors a closed college's architecture but saves nothing without the stabilization money that keeps landmark buildings from falling, as the ruin of Mississippi Industrial's halls makes plain.
References
- Mississippi Industrial College Wikipedia
- Mississippi Industrial College Historic District — National Register Nomination Form Mississippi Department of Archives and History
- Mississippi Industrial College Historic District Living Places / National Register
- Mississippi Industrial College Abandoned Southeast
- Mississippi Industrial College (1905) Hill Country History