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Dr. Elizabeth Davis Selected to Lead Furman as University’s First Female President

Dr. Elizabeth Davis, a longtime administrator at Baylor University, will serve as the 12th President of Furman University.
Dr. Elizabeth Davis, a longtime administrator at Baylor University, will serve as the 12th President of Furman University.

The Presidential Search Committee and Board of Trustees have unanimously selected Dr. Elizabeth Davis, a longtime administrator at Baylor University, to serve as the 12th President of Furman University, which will make her the first female president in the university’s more than 187 year history.

Davis currently serves as the Executive Vice President and Provost of Baylor University, a private Baptist university in Waco, Texas, and will step into her role as Furman's president on July 1.

Davis is a graduate of Baylor and has her doctorate in accounting from Duke University. She has served as an administrator and professor of accounting at Baylor for more than two decades, first joining the faculty in 1992.

In addition to serving as Baylor’s chief academic officer, Davis has served as Baylor’s vice provost for financial and academic administration and as an associate dean for undergraduate business programs.

As Baylor’s chief academic officer, Davis has managed an Academic Affairs budget of $235 million and a faculty of more than 935 members. She also oversees Baylor’s eleven schools and colleges and is the first woman to serve as provost in the university’s history, according to her biography on Baylor’s website.

Brian Boda, the student representative on the Presidential Search Committee, announced Davis’s presidency in an email sent to students at midnight on Thursday and said Davis had impressed the search committee from the beginning with her warmth, intellect, and understanding of how universities work.

“The first time we had the opportunity to talk to her, she just blew away the entire room,” he said.

Boda said that Davis would bring leadership and business acumen to the role of president, noting that Davis led the most recent strategic vision process for Baylor. He added that the search committee admired Davis’s commitment to the liberal arts.

“Coming from a liberal arts institution, she was such a clear advocate for the value of liberal arts and science education,” Boda said.

Davis is married to Dr. Charles Davis, the Walter Plumhoff Professor of Accounting at Baylor, and the couple have two children: Chad, a student at Wake Forest University, and Claire, who is in high school.

The university will officially introduce Davis at a press conference scheduled for Thursday at 11 a.m. in the Watkins Room. A student reception to welcome Davis is also scheduled for 1:30 p.m. in the Watkins Room.

3 thoughts on “Dr. Elizabeth Davis Selected to Lead Furman as University’s First Female President

  1. Welcome. Our class of 1983, one of whose members you've gotten to know, will support you in every way possible. Personally, I'm excited and at your service. You'll love FU and Greenville!

  2. Davis almost for certain knows Chet Edwards the visiting Poage lecturer at Baylor and champion of authentic Baptist views on the separation of church and state. As she gets accustom to the Upstate she is certain to draw distinction between and herself and fellow Baylor alum in the Upstate Trey Gowdy. As her fellow parishioner at Calvary Baptist in Waco, Roger Olson has made clear in his recent online review of Molly Worthen's Apostles of Reason, the world of George Truett and Chet Edwards has a large chasm between that of Francis Schaeffer and Trey Gowdy. That said, Davis, like her Baptist president colleagues Nathan Hatch at Wake Forest, and Underwood at Mercer will shine as President of all Furman Constituencies. I am delighted early indications are she is fullfilment of Jeff Rogers grand lecture on Furman and Baptists in 1993 in the LD Johnson What Really Matters series.

  3. I hope Dr. Davis will respect all points of view and encourage robust academic dialogue. Furman should not align itself with any specific religion. Rather, it should embrace open debate on all topics, regardless of religious or political orientation. Furman should not shape the minds of its students. They should be free to do that on their own. Furman has come so far from the days where the Southern Baptists shaped the university's mission. Returning to those days will relegate the university to an irrelevant sideshow, something we have successfully avoided with enlightened leadership over the last decade. I hope we can continue to move forward.

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