Lucius Pitts

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Bishop Lucius Holsey Pitts Sr (born February 28, 1915 in James, Georgia; died February 25, 1974 in Augusta, Georgia) was president of Miles College from 1961 to 1971.

Pitts was the second son born to Eugene Arratious and Katherine Daniels Pitts, sharecroppers, in Jones County, Georgia. His father named him after Bishop L. H. Holsey (1842-1920), who founded Paine College in 1883.

Pitts was licensed and ordained as a minister in the CME Church in in 1931. He completed his undergraduate degree from Paine College in 1941 and graduate degrees from Fisk Universita, Atlanta University, Peabody College and Western Reserve University.

After some time as head of a private high school in Cordele, Georgia, Pitts became the executive secretary of the Georgia Teachers and Education Association, representing 11,000 black teachers.

In 1961 Pitts was appointed president of Miles College. He led the college to a doubling of enrollment and a tenfold increase in its annual operating budget. He secured the college's accreditation in 1969. A year later he brought national attention to the school when he convinced Harvard dean John Munro to leave Cambridge for Birmingham to serve as Miles' director of freshman studies.

He left to accept the presidency of Paine College in 1971 and died in his office at age 59. He was buried next to the Gilbert-Lambuth Memorial Chapel on campus.

Pitts served on the board of the Southern Regional Council in Atlanta, and on a Commission on Cooperation and Council between The United Methodist and The Christian Methodist Episcopal Churches.

References

  • "Lucius Pitts, Educator, Is Dead; President of Paine College, 59" (February 27, 1974) The New York Times