Furman University

  • Founded: 1826
  • Address: 3300 Poinsett Hwy, Greenville, SC - South Carolina, United States (Map)
  • Tel: Show Number

Email Admissions

At the heart of our university–and your college experience–is an outstanding academic program. At Furman, you’ll enjoy a national caliber liberal arts and sciences education on a campus internationally recognized for its beauty, while preparing for a fulfilling career and a life of purpose. You won’t just become better. You’ll graduate with The Furman Advantage.

Furman provides students a distinctive education in fine arts, humanities, social sciences, mathematics and the sciences, as well as select professional disciplines. Our challenge is to grow students, faculty and staff in knowledge and understanding. We do this through small classes, individual instruction, hands-on learning, empathetic advising and personal attention. Our goal? To be a diverse community of different races, religions, geographic origins and socioeconomic backgrounds.

At Furman, we embrace meaningful diversity and equality as embodied by both implicit values and explicit practices in all of our endeavors. As a university community, we are committed to supporting students, faculty and staff from every walk of life.

For Furman, diversity goes beyond any single category and includes the full range of differences that encompass all that makes us unique, including differences in race, ethnicity, gender, socio-economic status, sexual orientation, citizenship status, disability, religion, world view and many others.

What makes us top-ranked? The minds we prepare. Furman’s acclaimed faculty challenge students to think critically, to evaluate and create, and to see the world from a wide perspective. They emerge as broadly-educated and well-rounded graduates, destined for leadership in a complex and changing world.

Founded in 1826, Furman is the oldest private university in South Carolina. The school is named for Richard Furman, a clergyman considered the most important Baptist leader before the Civil War. Furman was pastor of the First Baptist Church in Charleston, S.C., and became the first president of the Triennial Convention, the first national body of Baptists in America.

The South Carolina Baptist Convention established Furman’s original campus in Edgefield, S.C., but over the next three decades, the campus changed locations three times before arriving in downtown Greenville, S.C., in 1851. Originally founded as a men’s academy and theological institute, the theological school broke away from Furman in 1858 to become the Southern Baptist Seminary.

In 1924, Furman was named one of four collegiate beneficiaries of the Duke Endowment. The Duke Endowment grants sustained Furman through the Great Depression, helped the university coordinate with Greenville Woman’s College in the 1930s, and bolstered the university’s effort to pursue a new campus location. Furman broke ground on its current location north of its home city in 1953. The school would also become independent in 1992, breaking ties with the South Carolina Baptist Convention.

Today, Furman’s 750-acre campus features an Asian garden, a replica of Henry David Thoreau’s cabin, the David E. Shi Center for Sustainability, a Florentine bell tower, a spring-fed lake, 13 miles of paved trails through the woodlands and an 18-hole golf course. It’s not just the school’s beautiful location that makes Furman a great place to learn. Throughout the years, the university has worked to strengthen its residential campus community, rich student life, and rigorous academics.

It’s not just the lecture halls, laboratories and auditoriums. When you arrive, the entire campus is your classroom. Whether you’re looking for a club, career advice or volunteer opportunities, it’s easy to get involved and become a part of the Furman family. An award-winning city, and nationally recognized as a model for urban development, Greenville has been called “one of the 15 best cities for young adults” and “the next big food city in the South.”Spend a few days here experiencing a start-up culture with a touch of Southern hospitality, and it’s easy to see why people want to learn and live here.

Your living experience is a critical part of your education. All students live on campus for four years, cultivating a strong community that encourages collaboration and self-discovery. Furman also provides an exceptional culinary experience. With three dining locations, you’ll find plenty of variety and convenience. The Trone Student Center is a comfortable place for our students to meet, eat, chat and hang out. The center is also home to a number of important student resources, including The Malone Center for Career Engagement and the Rinker Center for Study Away and International Education. Whether you’re interested in eating, socializing or cramming for an exam, visit the Trone Student Center.

As a Furman student, your calendar will be full. Furman has around 150 clubs and organizations. Ultimate Frisbee. WPLS radio. Film clubs. Student government. Fraternities and sororities. If you can name it, there is probably a group of students who are involved in it. If not, find a few students who share your interest and start your own.

We admit bright, dedicated and motivated students to our school, and it shows. Ninety-seven percent of our graduates find work within six months of leaving our campus—a stat that’s well above the national average. These men and women engage in myriad of endeavors, entering meaningful and lucrative careers and contributing to the creation of new knowledge.Your time at Furman will make you a valuable candidate upon graduation, whether you’re marking the leap into the job market or applying to one of the best graduate schools in the world.

Where they work

  • Furman University
  • Greenville County Schools
  • Wells Fargo
  • Greenville Health System
  • US Army
  • Clemson University
  • Deloitte
  • EY
  • Michelin
  • Bank of America

What they do

  • Business Development
  • Education
  • Sales
  • Community and Social Services
  • Operations
  • Finance
  • Healthcare Services
  • Administrative
  • Information Technology
  • Research

Studied or Worked here? Share Your Review

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please do not post:

  • Aggressive or discriminatory language
  • Profanities (of any kind)
  • Trade secrets or confidential information

Thank you once again for doing your part to keep Edarabia the most trusted education source.

Community Reviews (9)

Furman University in South Carolina has genuinely transformed my child's educational journey with its exceptional curriculum and dedicated staff, who are always ready to lend a hand.
By S.D. (Jun, 2024) | Reply

I never expected to love furman this much. I expected it to be academically rigorous but have found tons of fun too. If you are looking for parties every night Furman is not for you, there is too much work If you are willing to study 4 nights a week and sundays you will love it here. Downtown is great. Good parties. Great mix of academically motivated fun people.
By Arianne (Dec, 2011) | Reply

In general people are really nice and you can definitely find your own clique regardless of your personal values/beliefs/etc. However, as a small university there are only so many people so if you want your friends to be exactly like you that probably won't happen here just given the size. Also, the campus tends to be more preppy and intellectual than other universities. Moreover, the work is really demanding. If you expect to go to college and get a bunch of free time and be able to party during the week, this is not the school for you. Nevertheless, you will get an amazing education and the faculty will help push you past any limit you ever thought you had.
By Margarette (Jun, 2011) | Reply

Excellent faculty! If your interested in Chemistry, Furman has one of the best Chemistry undergrad programs in the country. I choose Furman because of the research opportunities and the amazing science facilities. Academically the school is very challenging. There is plenty to do socially, however this is not a big party school. Downtown Greenville is great and the weather is awesome.
By Granger (Nov, 2010) | Reply

Furman is a great place, very idyllic, and the personal relationships gained through attending Furman are not found easily elsewhere. I've attended among others Vanderbilt, Notre Dame, and Clemson, and found that professionally, the personal relationships at Furman helped me grow career-wise and as a person more than anywhere else. Plus the campus is downright amazing and a beautiful place to spend four years.
By K Carmichael (Oct, 2010) | Reply

Attending Furman was a deeply significant, meaningful and important decision, and I utilize the outstanding education I received there every day. I recommend it highly.
By Brad (Aug, 2010) | Reply

I am an out of state student from NJ. I will be a senior next year and have loved Furman. The new science center is state of the art and the library is great. The workload is rigorous and the faculty is amazing. I began doing research in my freshman year! Students I've known and heard of have gone to highly selective grad schools. All 8 Ivy league law schools were represented in the class of 2009. Attending Furman was one of the best decisions I have made so far and I am excited to go back next year.
By Rodrigo (May, 2009) | Reply

Choosing Furman was the best choice I ever made, because I think I am receiving the BEST ivy-league quality education without dealing with ivy-league snootyness. I love that Furman is a small school (about 2800 students) because it means that my professors know who I am and are more than willing to help me when I need it. Furman is a community, and it is an engaging community with scores of opportunities for personal and intellectual growth. One thing to keep in mind is that the academics are VERY challenging. Students who are not dedicated, intrinsically motivated, and hardworking will not get by here. At Furman, the focus is on education rather than on partying--of course that does NOT mean that nobody has friends or fun, in fact there are frat parties every weekend and many students go out downtown during the week and weekend. There is also a strong greek presence, but greek organizations are more down-to-earth, more intimate, and less snobby than they seem to be at larger state schools.
By Rayver (Mar, 2008) | Reply

Furman is the place to go if you're really looking for a quality education with some Southern charm. Classes are just challenging enough, and the professors are wonderfully helpful. It definitely isn't the most diverse place, but the admissions department is really working on that and I really think everyone can find their niche.
By Evangeline (Jul, 2006) | Reply