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Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference

The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference is a collegiate athletic conference whose full members are historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in the Southeastern and the Mid-Atlantic United States. It participates in the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I, and in football, in the Football Championship Subdivision (FCS).

History
In 1969, a group whose members were long associated with interscholastic athletics met in Durham, North Carolina for the purpose of discussing the organization of a new conference. After the formulation of a committee, and their research reported, seven institutions, Delaware State University, Howard University, University of Maryland Eastern Shore, Morgan State University, North Carolina A&T State University, North Carolina Central University and South Carolina State College, agreed to become the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference. South Carolina State had been a longtime member of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, while the other charter members had been longtime members of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association. The conference's main goals were to establish and supervise an intercollegiate athletic program among a group of educational institutions that shared the same academic standards and philosophy of co-curricular activities and seek status as a Division I conference for all of its sports. The conference was confirmed in 1970, and had its first season of competition in football in 1971. The MEAC has had three full-time commissioners. North Carolina Central University rejoined the conference effective July 1, 2010. NCCU was one of seven founding member institutions of the MEAC, but withdrew from the conference in 1979, opting to remain a Division II member when the conference reclassified to Division I. While the MEAC has had no new full members since then, the conference added an associate member in 2014 when Augusta University, then known as Georgia Regents University, a Division II institution with Division I programs in men's and women's golf, joined for men's golf. Augusta became the MEAC's first associate member and first non-HBCU with any type of membership. The conference has since added two more non-HBCU associate members, with Monmouth University and the University of Alabama at Birmingham (UAB) joining for bowling in 2018. In April 2017, Savannah State announced that it would drop to Division II effective with the 2019–20 school year. In November 2017, Hampton announced they would leave the MEAC to join the Big South Conference beginning with the 2018–19 season. In February 2020 North Carolina A&T announced departing MEAC to join Big South Conference effective July 2021. Within few months, in June 2020, Florida A&M and Bethune-Cookman also announced that they will leave the MEAC and join the SWAC starting in July 2021. As a result, the MEAC will have eight members remaining for 2021, with only six of its members sponsoring football. The MEAC has hired a consulting firm to help assess its current schools and to help it identify potential institutions for addition to the conference. The conference plans to operate with eight current members, starting 2021 until further expansion, in a compact geographical footprint removing North and South divisions. In May 2021, multiple websites that report on HBCU sports indicated that the MEAC had reached out to two Division II HBCUs about their interest in transitioning to D-I and joining the MEAC. Kentucky State University and Virginia State University, respectively members of the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference and Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association, confirmed that they had discussed possible membership with the MEAC and had commissioned feasibility studies on moving to Division I. Officials at both schools stated that they were considering the move, but would not commit to any change. One report also indicated that Chicago State University, a predominantly African-American school but not an HBCU, had lobbied the MEAC regarding membership. CSU was scheduled to leave the Western Athletic Conference, a league in which it is a major geographic outlier, in July 2022 to become an independent. According to this report, the MEAC had offered CSU associate membership in one sport, but was lukewarm to CSU becoming a full member because it does not sponsor football and is well outside the MEAC's geographic footprint. In July 2022, the Northeast Conference (NEC) announced a partnership with the MEAC in which MEAC schools sponsoring baseball and men's and women's golf would become NEC affiliate members in their respective sports beginning in the 2022-23 season. == Member schools ==
Member schools
Current full members ;Notes: Associate members ;Notes: Former full members ;Notes: Former associate members ;Notes: Membership timeline DateFormat = yyyy ImageSize = width:1000 height:auto barincrement:20 Period = from:1970 till:2028 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal PlotArea = right:5 left:5 bottom:40 top:5 Colors = id:line value:black id:bg value:white id:Full value:rgb(0.7,0.9,0.8) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member in all sports id:FullxF value:rgb(0.9,0.8,0.7) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member in all sports except for football id:AssocF value:rgb(0.9,0.7,0.8) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member for football only id:AssocOS value:rgb(0.8,0.9,0.7) # Use this color to denote a team that is a member for another sport only id:OtherC1 value:rgb(0.996,0.996,0.699) # Use this color to denote a team that has moved in another conference id:OtherC2 value:rgb(0.988,0.703,0.383) # Use this color to denote a team that has moved in another conference when the other color has already been used PlotData= width:15 textcolor:black shift:(5,-5) anchor:from fontsize:s bar:1 color:FullxF from:1970 till:1971 text:Delaware State (1970–present) bar:1 color:Full from:1971 till:end bar:2 color:FullxF from:1970 till:1971 text:Howard (1970–present) bar:2 color:Full from:1971 till:end bar:3 color:FullxF from:1970 till:1971 text:Maryland Eastern Shore (1970–1979) bar:3 color:Full from:1971 till:1979 bar:3 color:AssocF from:1979 till:1980 bar:3 color:OtherC1 from:1980 till:1981 bar:3 color:FullxF from:1981 till:end text:(1981-present) bar:4 color:FullxF from:1970 till:1971 text:Morgan State (1970–1979) bar:4 color:Full from:1971 till:1979 bar:4 color:AssocF from:1979 till:1980 bar:4 color:OtherC1 from:1980 till:1984 text:D-II Ind. bar:4 color:FullxF from:1984 till:1986 text:(1984–present) bar:4 color:Full from:1986 till:end bar:5 color:FullxF from:1970 till:1971 text:North Carolina A&T (1970–2021) bar:5 color:Full from:1971 till:2021 bar:5 shift:(-30) color:AssocOS from:2021 till:2022 text:Big South bar:5 color:AssocOS from:2022 till:end text:CAA bar:6 color:FullxF from:1970 till:1971 text:North Carolina Central (1970–1979) bar:6 color:Full from:1971 till:1979 bar:6 color:AssocF from:1979 till:1980 bar:6 color:OtherC1 from:1980 till:2006 text:CIAA bar:6 color:OtherC2 from:2006 till:2010 text:D-II Ind. bar:6 color:FullxF from:2010 till:2011 text:(2010–present) bar:6 color:Full from:2011 till:end bar:7 color:FullxF from:1970 till:1971 text:South Carolina State (1970–present) bar:7 color:Full from:1971 till:end bar:8 color:FullxF from:1979 till:1980 text:Bethune–Cookman (1979–2021) bar:8 color:Full from:1980 till:2021 bar:8 color:OtherC1 from:2021 till:end text:SWAC bar:9 shift:(-40) color:FullxF from:1979 till:1980 text:Florida A&M (1979–1984) bar:9 color:Full from:1980 till:1984 bar:9 color:OtherC1 from:1984 till:1986 bar:9 color:FullxF from:1986 till:1987 text:(1986–2021) bar:9 color:Full from:1987 till:2003 bar:9 color:FullxF from:2003 till:2005 text:FBS Ind. bar:9 color:Full from:2005 till:2021 bar:9 color:OtherC2 from:2021 till:end text:SWAC bar:10 color:FullxF from:1985 till:end text:Coppin State (1985–present) bar:11 color:FullxF from:1995 till:1996 text:Hampton (1995–2018) bar:11 color:Full from:1996 till:2018 bar:11 color:OtherC1 from:2018 till:2022 text:Big South bar:11 color:OtherC2 from:2022 till:end text:CAA bar:12 color:Full from:1997 till:1998 text:Norfolk State (1997–present) bar:12 color:Full from:1998 till:end bar:13 shift:(-110) color:OtherC2 from:2007 till:2010 text:Winston-Salem State (2007–2010) bar:13 color:OtherC1 from:2010 till:end text:CIAA bar:14 color:FullxF from:2010 till:2011 text:Savannah State (2010–2019) bar:14 color:Full from:2011 till:2019 bar:14 color:OtherC1 from:2019 till:end text:SIAC ScaleMajor = gridcolor:line unit:year increment:2 start:1970 TextData = fontsize:M textcolor:black pos:(0,20) tabs:(400-center) text:^"Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference membership history" • > If the chart uses more than one bar color, add a legend by selecting the appropriate fields from the following three options (use only the colors that are used in the graphic.) Leave a blank line after the end of the timeline, then add a line with the selected values from the list, separated by a space. • Augusta State was merged into Georgia Regents University in January 2013; the merged school renamed itself Augusta University in 2015. == Facilities ==
Sports
The Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) sponsors championship competition in six men's and eight women's NCAA-sanctioned sports. Men's sponsored sports by school '''Men's varsity sports not sponsored by the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference which are played by MEAC schools:''' Women's sponsored sports by school '''Women's varsity sports not sponsored by the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference which are played by MEAC schools:''' == Championships ==
Championships
NCAA National championships Football The MEAC, along with the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC), are the only two Division I conferences whose members are mostly Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). In 2015, the MEAC joined the SWAC and Ivy leagues in abstaining from sending their conference champions to the FCS Playoffs. While the conference champion faces off in the Celebration Bowl against the SWAC Champion, the remaining conference members remain eligible for at-large bids for the playoffs. This is a partial list of the last 10 champions. For the full history, see List of Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference football champions. Celebration Bowl results Men's basketball On June 8, 1980, the MEAC earned the classification as a Division I conference by the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Since 1981, the MEAC has received a qualifying bid to NCAA post season play in the sport of basketball. In three cases, MEAC schools seeded 15th (Coppin State in 1997, Hampton in 2001, Norfolk State in 2012) defeated second-seeded teams South Carolina, Iowa State and Missouri, respectively, in the NCAA tournament. Coppin State again made history, as it qualified for the tournament as the first 20-loss team to play in the NCAA Tournament. Tournament performance by active schools Women's basketball Baseball Last 10 years of champions. In 2023, the four remaining baseball programs from the MEAC joined the Northeast Conference to compete in baseball as associate members. ==See also==
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