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Public Service & Agriculture

Public Service & Agriculture

SC State Public Service & Agriculture: Changing Lives in South Carolina

SC State University Public Service & Agriculture (PSA) innovates and educates to elevate the quality of life and raise the standard of living for all South Carolinians.

The Public Service & Agriculture program at SC State University helps to ensure the institution achieves its land-grant mission of improving the quality of life and raising the standard of living for all South Carolinians through teaching, research and service.

Explore SC State PSA

SC State 1890 Research & Extension
SC State 1890 Research & Extension

SC State University 1890 Research & Extension innovates and educates to elevate the quality of life and raise the standard of living for all South Carolinians.

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SC State Research & Demonstration Farm
SC State Research & Demonstration Farm

Located in Elloree, SC, the farm features over 200 acres, 2 center pivots, and drip irrigation, and has nearly 9,900 total sq. ft of facilities, including a farm manager residence, hay barn, high tunnel houses and large equipment shed.

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Camp Harry E. Daniels
Camp Harry E. Daniels

Camp Daniels features over 260 acres of rustic and tranquil camp and retreat setting,

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We Serve South Carolina

As one of the premier resources in South Carolina, SC State PSA conducts problem-solving research and provides quality outreach services and programs to rural and urban limited resource individuals, families and communities.

ExtensionSC State Public Service & Agriculture delivers its programming through its institutes and centers and its 1890 Research & Extension division.

The research and outreach programs are relevant in meeting the needs of those who SC State PSA serves, from advancing agriculture and protecting natural resources; to helping the state’s small farmers increase their revenue through enterprise diversification; engaging youth to reach their fullest potential; to educating individuals and families on health and wellness; preparing and exposing students to college and career readiness through innovative educational strategies; and providing various opportunities that build economic development for disadvantaged communities.

How to Be an 1890 Ag Innovation Scholar

Accomplishing the Mission for More than a Century

Land-grant universities have been the foundation of America’s agricultural productivity for more than a century. Their beginnings are based on the passage of the First Morrill Act of 1862, which permitted states to receive federal support in the form of land to establish colleges or universities. 

Old FarmAs prescribed by the Act, land-grant institutions were mandated to teach agriculture, military tactics and mechanical arts. In 1890, Congress passed the Second Morrill Act of 1890. This provision inspired the creation of the nation’s 19 historically black land-grant colleges, also known as 1890 institutions.

The Act required that states in the then-segregated South establish institutions of higher education for blacks.  Later additions to the land-grant system have been included in the last decades. The expansion of the land-grant system accommodated U.S. jurisdictions and the inclusion of the nation’s Native American colleges.

For SC State University, the First and Second Morrill Acts are the foundations on which SC State was established and remain integral in helping the university preserve its 1890 land-grant legacy of enhancing quality of life of South Carolinians through teaching, research and service.  The university was first created in 1872 in compliance with the 1862 Morrill Land Grant Act, when the South Carolina General Assembly created the South Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical Institute in 1872 in Orangeburg, S.C. This institute existed within the institution of Claflin College, now Claflin University, from 1872 until 1896.

Under the 1890 Morrill Land Grant Act, the South Carolina General Assembly enacted legislation in 1895 for the severance of the South Carolina Agricultural and Mechanical Institute, from Claflin College.  On March 4, 1896, SC State University opened independent of Claflin College as a land-grant institution under the name of the Colored Normal Industrial Agricultural and Mechanical College of South Carolina. The name was changed to South Carolina State College in 1954. The school received university status in 1992 and adopted its present name, South Carolina State University.

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