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Mountain State University (MSU) was a private university in Beckley, West Virginia. It closed in 2013. It was formerly named Beckley College and then The College of West Virginia. [1] Its Beckley campus is now occupied by West Virginia University Institute of Technology. Its other campus in Martinsburg, West Virginia was sold to a private ...
Mountain State University (1 C, 1 F) Pages in category "Defunct private universities and colleges in West Virginia" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of ...
West Virginia portal The main article for this category is Mountain State University . This category also contains articles related to Mountain State University under its former names of Beckley College and The College of West Virginia.
West Virginia has two land-grant universities: West Virginia State University and West Virginia University. [8] West Virginia University is also the state's sole participant university in the National Space Grant College and Fellowship Program. [9] In addition, West Virginia has two historically black colleges and universities that are members ...
West Virginia portal The main article for this category is Mountain State University . This category is for the alumni of Mountain State University (and of the university under its former names of Beckley College and The College of West Virginia).
The service area of the school was expanded by 1995 legislation that divided West Virginia into eleven districts. Southern serves all of Boone, Lincoln, Logan, McDowell, Mingo, and Wyoming counties. As of 2023, approximately 1,100 students are enrolled at the college and thirty-seven percent are part-time students. [ 5 ]
West Virginia portal; Notable men's basketball players who competed for the now-defunct Mountain State University.
Glenville State University was founded in 1872 as a branch of West Virginia Normal School. It became known as "Glenville State Normal School". [6] [7] It served the higher education needs of Central West Virginia. By 1910, the college enrollment had exceeded the population of Glenville and grew into a full four-year college by 1931.