The school was established as Peace Institute in 1857 by a group of men in the Presbyterian Synod of North Carolina. William Peace, a Raleigh businessman and church elder, was the leading donor for the school's construction. His gift of $10,000 would have the purchasing power today of $390,000.
The 8 acres of land on which the campus was developed and built was turned over to the school in 1878 by property owner R. Stanhope Pullen, another businessman and philanthropist for whom today’s Pullen Park in Raleigh is named.
The Main Building (its official name), the campus centerpiece pictured in the lead-off photo, was constructed between 1859-62, but almost immediately upon its completion, it was taken over by the Confederate States of America government to be used as a hospital for wounded Civil War soldiers.
That war and the Reconstruction Era afterward delayed the school’s opening, but it eventually welcomed students in 1872. The school initially educated boys and girls in primary grades and women in high school and college. In 1925, it awarded its first junior college degrees to women, and five years later changed its name to Peace, a Junior College for Women.
In 1940, the school offered classes for women in the last two years of high school and first two years of college, and three years later it changed its name to Peace College.
The school experienced its largest period of growth from the 1960s to 1970s, when 11 new buildings — with exteriors all in the same red brick as The Main Building — were added and existing structures were renovated.
Peace became a four-year college degree-issuing institution in 1995 and distributed its first bachelor’s degrees in 1997.
The change to its current name, Peace University, occurred in 2012, the same year the school began admitting male students. Today it has an enrollment of about 730 and offers undergraduate degrees in more than 30 majors as well as accelerated bachelor’s degrees through Peace Online for working adults.
Peace athletic teams, the Pacers, are members of the NCAA Division III and compete in the USA South Athletic Conference. Peace students have nine interscholastic sports to choose from — cross country, basketball, swimming, tennis, golf, lacrosse, volleyball and soccer for men and women, plus baseball for men and softball for women.
The campus is north of the heart of downtown Raleigh but within the Blount Street Historic District, which boasts multiple stately and historic homes. For example, Peace is just a few blocks north of the North Carolina Executive Mansion, the official home of the state's sitting governor.
To view a full gallery of images taken at Peace University, follow the link in this sentence.
Above: The view of The Main Building and Main Lawn as one enters campus from the south end along Peace Street. In an interesting detail, The Main Building is in the center of seven inter-connected buildings. It is flanked on the west (left) by Dinwiddie Chapel and Finley Residence Hall, and on the east (right) by Frazier Residence Hall, which in turn connects to two academic buildings, Presley (to the north) and Flowe (to the east).Above and below: Two views of the Lucy Cooper Finch Library, built in 1969. It has a collection of about 30,000 volumes. Below the first photo below are four images of the Lucy Finch Gaddy Garden, which is astride the library and named for one of Lucy Cooper Finch's daughters. Both women were Peace alumnae and philanthropists.

























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