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Website. www .gettysburg .edu. Gettysburg College is a private liberal arts college in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. Founded in 1832, the 225-acre (91 ha) campus is adjacent to the Gettysburg Battlefield. Gettysburg College has about 2,600 students, with roughly equal numbers of men and women.
East Coast Conference. The East Coast Conference was an college athletic conference at the Division I of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). It was founded as the university division of the Middle Atlantic Conferences (MAC) in 1958. The MAC consisted of over 30 teams at that time, making it impossible to organize full league ...
This is a list of college athletics programs in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania . Notes: This list is in a tabular format, with columns arranged in the following order, from left to right: Athletic team description (short school name and nickname), with a link to the school's athletic program article if it exists.
During the NCAA era, Gettysburg has made 26 NCAA tournament appearances, with 11 Final Fours and 3 tournament runner-ups. Gettysburg closest run at a championship was the 2009 national title game where they lost a close game to SUNY Cortland 9 to 7. The Bullets have had 33 consecutive winning seasons, stretching from 1987 to 2020.
1998 - Washington and Lee University joined the Centennial as an affiliate member for men's wrestling, effective in the 1998-99 academic year. 2001 - Johns Hopkins left the University Athletic Association (UAA) to fully align with the Centennial Conference for all the sports being sponsored, effective in the 2001-02 academic year.
John Barker Carpenter (October 30, 1930 – April 14, 2017) was an American college athletics coach and administrator. Education and early career [ edit ] He attended Penn State and graduated in 1960 with a master's degree in education.
1964 Gettysburg Bullets football. The 1964 Gettysburg Bullets football team was an American football team that represented Gettysburg College during the 1964 NCAA College Division football season. The team was the champion of the Middle Atlantic Conference, University Division .
The football conference essentially operated as three separate conferences with the larger schools (Bucknell, Delaware, Gettysburg, Lafayette, Lehigh, Muhlenberg, Rutgers, and Temple) playing a round-robin schedule in the "University Division," and the smaller schools being split into the "College Division - North" (Albright, Dickinson, Juniata ...