Belmont University

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Belmont University is a private Christian university located at 1900 Belmont Boulevard in Nashville, Tennessee, sitting on a 93-acre urban campus roughly two miles southwest of downtown. Starting as Belmont College for Young Women, founded in 1890 by schoolteachers Ida Hood and Susan Heron, it was incorporated as Belmont College in 1951 and became Belmont University in 1991. The largest Christian university in Tennessee and the state's second largest private university overall, Belmont enrolls nearly 9,000 students from every U.S. state and more than 30 countries.[1] Music business programs and health sciences are its main strengths, and the university's prominence reached new heights after hosting U.S. presidential debates in both 2008 and 2020, events that thrust it onto the national stage.[2]

History and founding

Two educators changed Nashville forever. Ida Hood and Susan Heron purchased the old Belle Monte estate in 1889 and opened Belmont College for Young Women with a simple mission: create a premier women's college in the city. Classes started on September 4, 1890. Ninety students showed up, each paying $60 in tuition. The curriculum covered nine fields: English, mathematics, natural science, philosophy, elocution, physical culture, art, music, and modern and ancient languages.

What made Belmont different wasn't just the breadth of subjects. The college refused to be mere finishing school decoration. Hood and Heron hired prominent faculty and demanded serious intellectual work from every student, mirroring curricula available elsewhere only to men. Graduates didn't just earn certificates; they received junior-college diplomas and went on to attend major universities like Vassar, Smith, and Bryn Mawr.[3]

Hood and Heron eventually retired. In 1913, Belmont College merged with Ward Seminary to create Ward–Belmont College, combining the Belmont campus with Ward's administrative expertise. The new institution housed a junior college, a preparatory school, a primary school, and a music conservatory all on one property. Ward–Belmont became the first junior college in the South to achieve full accreditation by the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools, an accomplishment that stood out regionally.[4]

Money problems mounted. Ward–Belmont's board looked for new funding solutions and found them in 1951 when the Tennessee Baptist Convention purchased the property in February. The school finished its 1950–51 year, and Belmont College reopened that fall as a four-year, coeducational institution under Dr. R. Kelly White, its first president. Herbert Gabhart took over in 1959 and transformed the place. Enrollment climbed from 365 students to more than 2,000. The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools granted accreditation. Most importantly, Gabhart launched the music business program that'd eventually define Belmont nationally.

Dr. William Troutt succeeded Gabhart. At just 32, Troutt was one of the country's youngest college presidents, and he was the first Belmont president since the Baptist Convention merger who wasn't a minister. During his tenure, Belmont started its first graduate program, a master's in business administration through the Massey School of Business, expanding academic scope significantly. The institution kept growing. In 1991, Belmont College officially became Belmont University, a name change reflecting the breadth of what it had become.[5]

Independence came in 2007. That's when Belmont cut official ties with the Tennessee Baptist Convention, though the institution continues describing itself as a "Christ-centered, student-focused community." The Christian identity remains central to campus culture and academic mission, even without denominational backing. Belmont holds membership in the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities, and that commitment shapes student life in tangible ways across campus.[6]

Campus and historic grounds

Belmont University sprawls across 93 historic acres, roughly two miles southwest of downtown Nashville. The land wasn't always academic. In the mid-19th century, what's now campus was Belle Monte, the Victorian estate of Joseph and Adelicia Acklen, among Tennessee's wealthiest couples. That antebellum heritage remains visible today, woven through the grounds in ways both obvious and subtle.[7]

The Belmont Mansion sits on university property but the Belmont Mansion Association, a nonprofit, maintains it. The building's open for public tours and displays Victorian art and furnishings from the Acklen era. Original gazebos and statuary dot the surrounding landscape. About two hundred yards south stands the historic Bell Tower, which started as a water tower on the Acklens' original estate and served as a signal tower during the Civil War. Today it houses 42 bells weighing over three tons, making it one of only five carillons in Tennessee. It's become the symbolic centerpiece of campus and anchors Belmont's official logo.[8]

The campus sits in an urban setting near Midtown, bordered by the Hillsboro–West End, Music Row, Edgehill, and Belmont–Hillsboro neighborhoods. Walking distance gets you to 12South and Hillsboro Village. Wedgewood Avenue tells the story of campus growth through its landmark buildings. Freeman Hall dates to 1890 and connects to The Jack C. Massey Business Center from 1990, creating a visual philosophy that blends historic preservation with contemporary construction. Freeman Hall's flanked by Fidelity Hall, built during Ward–Belmont days, and Barbara Massey Hall, which houses the university's main dining facilities.[9]

Campus security operates visibly across university grounds and into surrounding neighborhoods. Local residents near the Hillsboro–Belmont corridor regularly note the department's presence as part of the area's safety environment. The office also runs community services like a lost-and-found program. Relations with adjacent neighborhoods—Edgehill, Belmont–Hillsboro, and blocks approaching 12South—are generally cooperative. Belmont students and staff are regarded as engaged, low-friction neighbors in a part of Nashville that's seen rapid residential and commercial growth over the past two decades.

Academics and programs

Belmont is coeducational and primarily residential, offering bachelor's, master's, and doctoral degrees across more than 130 undergraduate areas of study, 35 master's programs, and seven doctoral programs. Fall 2024 saw 7,167 undergraduate students enrolled. The student-to-faculty ratio is 12:1, and the university operates on a semester-based calendar. In the 2026 edition of U.S. News & World Report Best Colleges, Belmont ranks No. 213 among National Universities and No. 39 for Best Undergraduate Teaching. The publication's recognized Belmont as one of the most innovative colleges in the country for more than fifteen consecutive years.[10][11]

The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) accredits Belmont to award baccalaureate, master's, and doctoral degrees. Professional bodies across nursing, business, pharmacy, law, and the arts hold specialized accreditations for individual programs. The university's colleges include the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, the College of Sciences and Mathematics, the Gordon E. Inman College of Health Sciences and Nursing, the Jack C. Massey College of Business, the Mike Curb College of Entertainment and Music Business, the College of Theology and Christian Ministry, the O'More College of Architecture and Design, the College of Education, the College of Law, and the College of Pharmacy.[12]

The entertainment and music business program is Belmont's flagship. The Mike Curb College of Entertainment & Music Business, founded in 2003, encompasses all major disciplines needed for professional careers in entertainment. Belmont's the only music business degree program worldwide holding AACSB International accreditation, and Billboard magazine regularly ranks it among the top music business schools globally.[13] Being just one block from Music Row gives students direct access to record labels, management companies, publishing firms, booking agencies, recording studios, and law firms. The extensive internship program places hundreds of students annually in Nashville, New York, and Los Angeles.[14] Notable alumni include country artists Brad Paisley and Trisha Yearwood, songwriter and publisher Ashley Gorley, Ben Vaughn of Warner/Chappell, and Cindy Mabe, chief executive of Universal Music Group Nashville.

In June 2006, Belmont opened the $18 million Gordon E. Inman Center, housing the Gordon E. Inman College of Health Sciences and Nursing. The three-story building features learning laboratories with SimMan mannequins that simulate patient responses for nursing students, plus specialized classrooms for adult and pediatric occupational therapy, maternity and neonatal care, orthopedics, and clinical instruction.[15]

The College of Law arrived in 2011, adding a professional dimension to campus. Alberto Gonzales, the 80th Attorney General of the United States, served as Dean of the College of Law from 2017 until announcing his departure effective May 31, 2026.[16]

Belmont's Speech and Debate Team stands out. In 2026, the team defended its Tennessee state championship for the eighth consecutive year, extending a record streak that reflects the university's commitment to academic achievement across professional and creative programs.[17]

Presidential debates

Belmont University made history twice over. The Commission on Presidential Debates selected Belmont from 16 candidate sites nationwide to host the Town Hall Presidential Debate on October 7, 2008, the first presidential debate ever held in Tennessee. The state had been home to three presidents—Andrew Jackson, Andrew Johnson, and James K. Polk—but had never hosted a debate until Belmont stepped in.[18]

The October 7, 2008 matchup between then-Senator Barack Obama and U.S. Senator John McCain used a town hall format, letting audience members pose questions directly to the candidates. Nielsen Media Ratings reported that more than 63.2 million households tuned in, making it the most-watched of the three presidential debates that fall. Tom Brokaw of NBC moderated. The event took place in Belmont's Curb Event Center. It dramatically raised Belmont's national profile and proved a small private university could handle a logistically complex event of genuine national consequence.[19]

In November 2019, the Commission on Presidential Debates announced Belmont would host again. The event took place on October 22, 2020, as the third and final debate of that campaign season. Belmont won out over five competing cities, including Hartford, Omaha, Ann Arbor, South Bend, and Salt Lake City. President Donald Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden faced off in the Curb Event Center, with NBC's Kristen Welker moderating. Nielsen reported it drew 63 million viewers across the 15 television networks that carried it, cementing Belmont's status as a venue for America's most important political conversations.[20]