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Johnson C. Smith University was established on April 7, 1867, as the Biddle Memorial Institute at a meeting of the Catawba Presbytery in the old Charlotte Presbyterian Church. Mary D. Biddle donated $1,400 to the school. The school was then named after her late husband, Henry Jonathan Biddle, who had died after the Battle of Glendale in 1862.
Johnson C. Smith Golden Bulls football The Irwin Belk Complex is a multi-use 4,500 seat stadium on the campus of Johnson C. Smith University (JCSU) in Charlotte, North Carolina United States. The stadium plays host to JCSU events.
Biddle Memorial Hall is a historic building located on the campus of Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina.It was built in 1883, and is a 3 1/2-story, five bay Romanesque-style brick and stone building on a raised basement.
It’s homecoming weekend, and Johnson C. Smith is undefeated. How did the Golden Bulls get to this place? HBCU football: Johnson C. Smith is finding success with Charlotte-area talent
One of the top HBCU football programs in the country, Johnson C. Smith of Charlotte celebrated homecoming Saturday with a game against Shaw of Raleigh.
Johnson C. Smith University station is located on Beatties Ford Road, flanked by nearby Mechanics and Farmers Bank (M&F Bank) and Johnson C. Smith University. Five Points, the intersection of Beatties Ford Road, Rozzelles Ferry Road, State Street, West Fifth Street, and West Trade Street, is one of the oldest intersections in the Mecklenburg County and the gateway to West End.
On December 27, 1892, Livingstone College and Biddle College, (Johnson C. Smith) University played in the snows of Salisbury, North Carolina, just two days after Christmas. A writer of a story in the 1930 year-book of Livingstone College provided a glimpse of that December experience when the team from Biddle Institute traveled to Livingstone's ...
Map of NCAA Division II football programs, 2024. This is a list of the schools in Division II of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) in the United States that have football as a varsity sport. In the 2024 season, [1] there are a total of 162 Division II football programs – one fewer than 2023. Changes from last season were: