Allen was named as Lincoln University's 14th president in May 2017, assumed office on July 1, and was inaugurated in a ceremony at the university's Chester County campus on October 20 of that year. By 2020, she had improved retention rates, nearly doubled the number of individual donors, and increased alumni giving by 34%. She campaigned to improve Lincoln's technology, student support services, and residence halls. In December 2020, billionaire
MacKenzie Scott donated $20 million to Lincoln (the largest single gift in the university's history), and Brooklyn Nets guard Kyrie Irving paid the tuition costs of nine graduating seniors. On July 10, 2020, in a closed-door
virtual meeting that some board members could not attend because of technical or financial difficulties, Lincoln's board of trustees refused to renew Allen's contract. The trustees offered no explanation either to the president or the public. According to
The Philadelphia Inquirer, "The vote drew anger from the 250-person audience on an adjacent Zoom call, as well as the larger community, much of which had rallied behind Allen, a Lincoln alumna who had become the school's 14th president in 2017." Allen sued for breach of contract and violation of Pennsylvania's sunshine laws as well as the university's bylaws, which mandated a public vote. Pennsylvania Attorney General
Josh Shapiro and Governor
Tom Wolf backed the president and also filed suit against the board. Lincoln's student government association and many alumni rallied to her support, launching a petition that had garnered more than 14,500 signatures even before her ouster. On July 24,
Chester County Judge William P. Mahon ordered Allen to be reinstated. On August 6, the board of trustees voted to negotiate a new contract with Allen, and on September 19, the board of trustees unanimously voted to approve a new contract granting her another five-year term as president. In October 2020,
The Philadelphia Tribune named her as one of Philadelphia's most influential African American leaders. In January 2021, the
HBCU Campaign Fund declared her to be one of ten "most dominant" HBCU leaders of the year. == References ==