Alma White College - History

History

In June 1917 an elderly German professor came to Zarephath, the headquarters of the Pillar of Fire, and offered to teach college level classes. Several other classes were organized around a standard college curriculum.

The college was first allowed by the New Jersey Department of Education) to grant Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees in 1921 and the name Alma White College was chosen. Alma White's son, Arthur Kent White was the first president starting in 1921. Alma White was the founder of the church.

In 1923 the Ku Klux Klan in New Jersey provided funding for the school, allowing it to become "the second institution in the north avowedly run by the Ku Klux Klan to further its aims and principles." Alma White said that the Klan philosophy "will sweep through the intellectual student classes as through the masses of the people." At that time, the Pillar of Fire was publishing the pro-KKK monthly periodical The Good Citizen. In 1927 the college conferred its first Doctor of Divinity degree.

Arthur Kent White retired as president in 1971.

The college made the decision to shut down its liberal arts and science programs. The state gave the school permission to allow the students already enrolled to complete their studies until graduation.

It graduated its last student in June 1978.

The buildings suffered heavy damage in 1971, 1999, and 2011 from flooding on the Delaware and Raritan Canal and the Millstone River.

After the closing of the college, the Pillar of Fire continued to operate Zarephath Bible Institute, which historically had operated on the campus. In the early 2001, on the same campus, the Pillar of Fire founded Somerset Christian College.

Following the flooding caused by Hurricane Irene in 2011, the Zarephath campus buildings have been condemned, and all classes meet at Stonecrest Church in Warren, New Jersey.

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