Loss of a Legend

Julius Chapman, TU’s first dean of minority affairs, passed away on October 24, 2023

By MIKE UNGER on October 25, 2023

Dean Chapman sits on a bench, smiling
Dean Julius Chapman sits on a bench in the quad named in his honor: Dr. Julius Chapman Quadrangle. (Towson University)

Julius Chapman—who as TU’s first dean of minority affairs recruited and mentored Black students while helping to establish the Black Student Union, the Black Faculty and Administrators Association and the Black Cultural Center—died on Oct. 24.

“Dr. Chapman’s leadership laid a foundation for the transformation to the inclusive university that has become a hallmark of TU’s student life and academic enterprise,” says Melanie Perreault, TU’s interim president, in a statement. “Our work continues every day to build upon and honor his legacy for generations to come.”

In 2021, the lawn between the Media Center and Stephens Hall was dedicated the Dr. Julius Chapman Quadrangle. In prior years, a bust and a bench overlooking Van Bokkelen Hall, where his office was located, were dedicated in his honor. At Homecoming in 2022, the National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC) Tribute Walkway was built in Chapman Quad, funded by TU’s historically Black fraternities and sororities and their supporters.

When Chapman started at TU in 1968, Black student enrollment was less than 1% of the total student population. Today, more than 63% of first-year students identify as an underrepresented racial or ethnic minority, and TU graduates more Black students than any university in Maryland.

Services for Dean Chapman will take place Fri., Nov. 10 and Sat. Nov. 11. 

  • Viewing will be held, Fri., Nov. 10, 5 - 8 p.m.
    Wylie Funeral Home
    9200 Liberty Rd., Randallstown, MD 21133
  • Homegoing Services will take place on Sat., Nov. 11.
         - Wake - 10 - 10:30 a.m.
         - Omega Service - 10:30 - 11:00 a.m.
         - Funeral Service - 11:15 a.m. 
    St. John's Baptist Church 
    9055 Tamar Dr., Columbia, MD 21045