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Tennessee State University (Tennessee State, Tenn State, or TSU) is a public historically black land-grant university in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Founded in 1912, it is the only state-funded historically black university in Tennessee. It is a member-school of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund. [5]
A four-story, 250,000-square-foot (23,000 m 2) building, the MTSU library contains over 1 million volumes and more than 33,000 periodicals. [1] Construction on the James E. Walker Library started on the 85th anniversary of the university's founding, September 11, 1996.
"A joint project of South Carolina Humanities, the University of South Carolina Press, the USC Libraries, the USC Center for Digital Humanities, the USC College of Arts & Sciences, the USC Institute for Southern Studies, the South Carolina State Library, and many other organizations." Tennessee: Tennessee Encyclopedia
June 2024: Tennessee State University taps Ronald A. Johnson as interim president. This article originally appeared on Nashville Tennessean: Tennessee State: ...
Interim President Ronald A. Johnson gives his remarks at the beginning of the TSU Board of Trustees meeting at Tennessee State University in Nashville, Tenn., Friday, Sept. 20, 2024.
The fate of Tennessee State University's board — and whether the historically Black university will continue to be governed by an independent board — will be considered Wednesday morning by a ...
Nevertheless, by 1919, Carnegie built twenty library building in Tennessee, including more academic and African-American libraries than any other southern state. Moreover, Carnegie authorized the single largest grant for an academic library on an American university campus in Tennessee.
Newspapers on Microfilm at the Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville: Tennessee Secretary of State. (Searchable by locale) Bibliography of Tennessee Bibliographies: Newspapers, Nashville: Tennessee Secretary of State "Tennessee". CJR's Guide to Online News Startups. New York: Columbia Journalism Review.