Duns Scotus College
Encyclopedia
Duns Scotus College was a college of the Order of Friars Minor or O.F.M. in Southfield, Michigan
from 1930 until 1979 owned by Saint John the Baptist Province in Cincinnati Ohio. It was first regularly accredited in 1969. It offered only bachelor degrees in Philosophy until 1971 when it expanded to offer a few other liberal arts degrees.
It was founded when the Friars decided their previous three-seminary set up in Kentucky and Ohio was too unwieldy. In 1928 ground was broken for the college at the corner of Nine Mile Road and Evergreen Road in Southfield. It was designed by Wilfrid B. Anthony.
People with bachelors degrees from Duns Scotus are found on the faculties of many colleges and universities in the United States.
Southfield, Michigan
According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of , of which 0.04% is water. The main branch of the River Rouge runs through Southfield. The city is bounded to the south by Eight Mile Road, its western border is Inkster Road, and to the east it is bounded by Greenfield Road...
from 1930 until 1979 owned by Saint John the Baptist Province in Cincinnati Ohio. It was first regularly accredited in 1969. It offered only bachelor degrees in Philosophy until 1971 when it expanded to offer a few other liberal arts degrees.
It was founded when the Friars decided their previous three-seminary set up in Kentucky and Ohio was too unwieldy. In 1928 ground was broken for the college at the corner of Nine Mile Road and Evergreen Road in Southfield. It was designed by Wilfrid B. Anthony.
People with bachelors degrees from Duns Scotus are found on the faculties of many colleges and universities in the United States.