Piedmont College to become Piedmont University in 2021

Staff Report

Monday, June 29th, 2020

In recognition of dramatic growth and transformation at the institution over the past two decades, the Piedmont College Board of Trustees approved changing the name to Piedmont University early next year.  The proposal was unanimously endorsed by the Piedmont College Alumni Board.  

“Increasingly we are viewed as a regional liberal arts university,” stated President James F. Mellichamp.  “The name shift not only reflects who we are – but also where we are going.”

The college’s four academic schools – Harry W. Walker School of Business, R.H. Daniel School of Nursing & Health Sciences, School of Education, and School of Arts & Sciences – will become colleges.

The college, which includes campuses in Demorest and Athens, is coming off its largest-ever freshman class, has completed several large campus improvements, and recently purchased almost 90 acres adjacent to the Demorest campus for expansion. 

Founded in 1897, Piedmont is also experiencing record levels of giving, has added new academic programs and is reaching beyond Georgia to recruit students. Although the official name will change, Piedmont’s identity, core values, and emphasis on liberal arts education and real-world, professional preparation will remain the same.

U.S. News ranked Piedmont no. 50 among “regional universities” in the 12-state South Region in 2019, up from 63 in 2018 and 68 in 2017. 

The college, which enrolls more than 2,500 students, offers a panoply of degrees from baccalaureate through doctoral levels.  It is developing plans to acknowledge the new name and also celebrate its 125th anniversary in 2022. 

“This change opens an exciting new chapter in the history of Piedmont,” said Piedmont Board Chairman Thomas A. “Gus” Arrendale III. “It was made after careful deliberation and discussion and reflects the amazing progress that is taking place at Piedmont.”