On October 22, 1825, Cumberland Synod, the ruling judicatory of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, resolved to establish a college somewhere in southwestern Kentucky. The school's primary purpose was to educate young men who wanted to become ministers, but the school would be open to all. The school would also require students to perform manual labor for two to three hours a day. The synod appointed a commission to determine a site for the college. The commission considered four towns in Kentucky (
Hopkinsville,
Russellville,
Elkton, and Princeton) and finally chose Princeton on January 13, 1826. The commission hired
Franceway R. Cossitt, a Cumberland Presbyterian minister, as the college's president and sole teacher. Classes first began on March 1, 1826. By the end of the year, the college had about sixty students and had hired another teacher. Originally the college was named, as the synod had resolved, the Cumberland Presbyterian College. However, when the synod requested a charter for the college, members of the Kentucky legislature worried that the original name would stoke sectarian conflict. The legislature therefore dropped "Presbyterian" from the name and issued a charter to Cumberland College on January 8, 1827. Cumberland College was part of a larger
manual labor movement, as other schools like the
Oneida Institute and
Oberlin College required students to perform physical labor in addition to their study. The synod hoped that manual labor would prevent students from sacrificing "bodily vigor" at the expense of "mental energy." The college had a working farm, and students worked on the farm two hours a day. In 1830 the college became home to the first Cumberland Presbyterian newspaper, the
Religious and Literary Intelligencer. The paper's editor moved to Nashville in 1832 and changed the paper's name to the
Revivalist; two years later, it was renamed the
Cumberland Presbyterian, and eventually became the denominational organ. ==Relocation and final years==