History of HPU
![HPU breaks ground for Newbury Family Welcome Center (2020)</p>HPU establishes new visual identity with new logo and Buzzsaw mascot (2021)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Newbury-Welcome-Center.jpg)
![First classes held; tuition $22.50, room and board $2.50; first classroom/boarding house, Robnett Hall, built (1890)</p>First classes held in Old Main (1892)</p>HPC grants first degree to J.D. Robnett Jr. (1895)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Robnett.jpg)
![HPC produces first student publication, <I>HP Monthly</I>; Robnett Hall destroyed by fire (1902)</p>HPC begins intercollegiate athletics (1903)</p>New wing on Old Main erected (1907)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Our-Story-3.jpg)
![Women's residence Howard Payne Hall opens; HPC publishes first <I>Lasso</I> yearbook (1912)</p>HPC returns from a junior college to a senior college (1914)</p>Carrie Camp submits winning entry in contest, establishing "Yellow Jackets" as official HPC nickname (1915)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Lasso-scaled.jpg)
![Mims Auditorium opens; "H" Pond built; HPC hosts first Baptist Student Union convention (1920)</p>HPC defeats Texas A&M on Kyle Field (1922)</p>HPC forms Woman's Athletic Association; sports include tennis, horseback riding, hiking and swimming (1926)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/HPU-Concert-Choir-Mims-Auditorium.jpg)
![Campus organizations include Red Heads, composed of redheaded students (1932)</p>The <I>Lasso</I> staff dedicates annual to Dr. O.E. Winebrenner, dean of men, "a man whose thoughts are ever for the future success of this beloved institution"(1934)</p>Jacket Gymnasium opens (1939)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Dr.-Winebrenner-cropped.png)
![HPC temporarily halts athletics due to World War II (1943)</p>Taylor Hall opens; intramural competition begins with, among others, bowling, ping pong and touch football (1947)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Intramurals-1-scaled.jpg)
![Walker Memorial Library opens; Daniel Baker College consolidates with HPC (1953)</p>Veda Hodge Hall opens; President Dr. Thomas Taylor retires after 48 years; Dr. O.E. Winebrenner retires after 42 years (1955)</p>HPC awards honorary Doctor of Laws degree to Lyndon Baines Johnson (1957)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/DBC.jpg)
![HPC twirling team Liberty Belles begins first year (1960)</p>Winebrenner Hall opens (1962)</p>Jennings Hall opens; Paul and Paula (students Ray Hildebrand and Jill Jackson Landon), on strength of #1 hit "Hey Paula," bump up-and-coming Beatles from live BBC broadcast (1963)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Paul-and-Paula-for-web.jpg)
Bell Towers dedicated (1978)
![Heritage Singers brave sub-zero temperatures to sing for U.S. troops near Arctic Circle (1973)</p>HPC becomes HPU (1974)</p>Newman Hall opens (1976)</br>Bell Towers dedicated (1978)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Bell-Towers.jpg)
![Jeff Sudderth becomes 10,000th graduate (1981)</p>Basketball standout Peggy Taylor becomes HPU's first female All-American (1983)</p>Old Main burns (1984)</p>Sid Richardson Hall closes and men move into Jennings Hall, former women's residence hall (1985)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Old-Main-1-scaled.jpg)
![HPU unveils new mascot Buzzsaw (1996)</p>Dale Meinecke and Christy Crawford receive first Nat Tracy Servant Leadership Awards (1998)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Classic-Buzzsaw-2.png)
![Old Main Tower erected in memory of Old Main (2001)</p>Women's basketball team wins NCAA Division III Women's Basketball Championship; HPU launches Currie-Strickland Distinguished Lectures in Christian Ethics (2008)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/HPU-Old-Main-Tower-Plaza-for-web.jpg)
![HPU celebrates the inauguration of Dr. Cory Hines '97, the institution's 20th president (2019)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/Dr.-Hines-delivers-inauguration-address.jpg)
![HPU breaks ground for Newbury Family Welcome Center (2020)</p>HPU establishes new visual identity with new logo and Buzzsaw mascot (2021)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/01/Newbury-Welcome-Center.jpg)
![First classes held; tuition $22.50, room and board $2.50; first classroom/boarding house, Robnett Hall, built (1890)</p>First classes held in Old Main (1892)</p>HPC grants first degree to J.D. Robnett Jr. (1895)](http://v62q.muurausahvenlampi.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Robnett.jpg)
The early years
Howard Payne College was founded at Indian Creek on June 29, 1889, by members of the Pecan Valley Baptist Association and Rev. Noah Turner Byars and Dr. John David Robnett. They named the college after the first major benefactor, Edward Howard Payne, the brother-in-law of Dr. Robnett. HPC held its first classes in 1890 and five years later granted its first degree to J.D. Robnett. In 1913, the yellow jacket was selected as the university mascot.
Dr. Thomas H. Taylor led the university through the Great Depression, which began just two months into his presidency. According to Dr. Robert Mangrum, HPU historian, it was made apparent to Dr. Taylor at the 1930 Texas Baptist convention that the BGCT had decided to close the institution due to an inability to continue funding. Dr. Mangrum writes that a faculty prayer meeting was held when Dr. Taylor returned to Brownwood and it was decided that HPC would operate with the receipts and endowment interest with no deficits.
In 1953, Daniel Baker College, a Presbyterian college located in Brownwood and founded in the same year as Howard Payne, consolidated with HPC. After leading the college through the hardship of the Great Depression and helping the campus expand, Dr. Taylor retired as president. He was the university’s longest-serving president after 26 years in the role
Second half of the 20th Century
Following Dr. Taylor’s retirement, Dr. Guy D. Newman was named president of the university. As president, Dr. Newman founded the Douglas MacArthur Academy of Freedom. Now called the Guy D. Newman Honors Academy, the program continues to be housed in the Academy of Freedom building. Dr. Newman retired in 1972.
In October 1974, under the presidency of Dr. Roger Brooks, Howard Payne College became Howard Payne University.
Dr. Don Newbury ’61 served as the president of HPU from 1985 to 1997. During his presidency, the university increased enrollment significantly and underwent numerous facility upgrades and additions. Due to his penchant for sharing popcorn with students from home neat campus, he is fondly remembered as the “Popcorn President.” Also, during Dr. Newbury’s presidency, the university announced a newly designed mascot, “Buzzsaw,” in 1996.
The new millennium
HPU experienced one of its most significant athletics successes during the 2000s. During the 2008-2009 season, the HPU women’s basketball team went 33-0 and capped their perfect season by winning the 2008 NCAA Division III Women’s Basketball National Championship.
In 2019, Dr. Cory Hines ’97 was named president at HPU. Ground was broken for the Newbury Family Welcome Center in 2020, with construction scheduled for completion in spring 2022. Additionally, the university began restoring the Douglas MacArthur Academy of Freedom’s wings in 2020.
Numerous other campus improvement projects were completed in 2020 and 2021, including renovations of the Veda Hodge Residence Hall lobby, the Newbury Place Student Apartments and the lobbies of the Guy D. Newman Hall of American Ideals.
The university unveiled a new visual identity in the fall of 2021, consisting of new logos for the university and athletics, as well as a redesign of the Buzzsaw mascot.
Dr. Robert Mangrum published an account of HPU’s history titled “For Howard Payne My All: 125 Years of Christian Higher Education and Service, 1889-2015.” The book, which took 17 years to write, celebrates the university’s history since its founding in 1889. It is available for $30 on DVD or USB flash drive at HPU’s Stinger Store in the Mabee University Center. All proceeds from the book’s sales support an academic scholarship at HPU.