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Baltimore City Community College dates its origins to the Baltimore Junior College (BJC), founded as part of the Baltimore City Public Schools system in 1947 to provide post-high school education for returning World War II (1939/1941–1945) veteran soldiers and officers known as the Veterans Institute and was the inspiration of Harry Bard, its later dominant president and alumnus of the BCC.
In December 1967, the College was officially chartered as Beaufort County Technical Institute. The vocational and technical programs of the Institute were complemented by a college parallel program which opened in 1968 in conjunction with East Carolina University.
Baltimore City College, known colloquially as City, City College, and B.C.C., is a college preparatory school with a liberal arts focus and selective admissions criteria located in Baltimore, Maryland. [5]
County Commissioner chair Diane Ellis-Marseglia said she hoped the new trustees would address "a series of financial dilemmas" the college faces.
CCBC Catonsville . Currently located at 800 South Rolling Road, Catonsville, Maryland, and approximately one mile west of the Baltimore Beltway, the Catonsville campus of CCBC originated in 1957 as Catonsville Community College (CCC).
BCCC Washington: Beaufort. Hyde Tyrell Washington 6,800 1963 1967 Beaufort County Extension Unit (1963–1967) Beaufort County Technical Institute (1967–1979) [2] [16] Bladen Community College: BCC Dublin: Bladen: 3,014 1967 1967 Bladen Technical Institute (1967–1987) [2]" /> [16] Blue Ridge Community College: BRCC East Flat Rock: Henderson ...
BC3 offers certificates and 2-year degrees in the fields of business, nursing and health, humanities and social sciences, and science and technology.
The old "Assembly Rooms" of the former Baltimore Dancing Assembly, built 1797, third floor added 1835. First major school-owned structure of "The High School" (founded 1839), purchased 1843, later called the "Male High School" briefly after 1844, renamed the "Central High School of Baltimore", (later becoming The Baltimore City College in 1866).