Black Hills State University in South Dakota Names Campus Building for Dr. Lionel Bordeaux, Longtime President of Sinte Gleska University

Oct 17, 2017 | Blog

Black Hills State University in South Dakota honored Dr. Lionel Bordeaux (Sicangu Lakota), President of Sinte Gleska University

Black Hills State University in South Dakota honored Dr. Lionel Bordeaux (Sicangu Lakota), President of Sinte Gleska UniversityBlack Hills State University in South Dakota honored Dr. Lionel Bordeaux (Sicangu Lakota), President of Sinte Gleska University and the longest-serving university president in the United States, by naming a residence hall on its campus in his honor. Bordeaux Hall gives university students a view of Crow Peak, Spearfish Mountain, and Lookout Mountain, while providing them with a place to meet, study, and learn.

Black Hills State University in South Dakota honored Dr. Lionel Bordeaux (Sicangu Lakota), President of Sinte Gleska UniversityPresident Dr. Thomas Jackson, Jr. of Black Hills State University gave remarks about Dr. Bordeaux’s education career at the event held in front of Bordeaux Hall on October 10. Dr. Bordeaux was presented with a star quilt and a ribbon cutting followed the ceremony, which ended with a prayer.

Dr. Bordeaux began his career as President of Sinte Gleska University (SGU), where he has served for more than 40 years, less than 10 years after his graduation from Black Hills State University. SGU is located on the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota and is one of 35 accredited tribal colleges and universities serving American Indian communities on our near Indian reservations. SGU offers associate, bachelors, and master’s degree programs to its students, providing accessible and affordable higher education opportunities steeped in Native culture and language.

Black Hills State University in South Dakota honored Dr. Lionel Bordeaux (Sicangu Lakota), President of Sinte Gleska UniversityPresident Bordeaux has served as a councilman for the Rosebud Sioux tribal government; chair for the tribal education committee and education board; board member of the South Dakota State Education and Planning Commission; regent of the Haskell Indian Junior College in Lawrence, Kansas; and president of both the American Indian Higher Education Consortium and the National Indian Education Association.

Among his many honors, President Bordeaux is a member of the South Dakota Hall of Fame and served as chair of the White House Advisory Board on Tribal Colleges and Universities.

President Bordeaux attributes the success of SGU and his long tenure as president to the spirituality of the medicine men who provide prayer and ceremony to the community the university serves and to the tribal nation the university represents.

Recent Blog Posts

NYC Indigenous Food Event April 30 Features Five Indigenous Celebrity Chefs

NYC Indigenous Food Event April 30 Features Five Indigenous Celebrity Chefs

On April 30, the American Indian College Fund will introduce New Yorkers to Indigenous cuisine at its New York City EATSS (Epicurean Award to Support Scholars) event from 5:30 p.m. – 8:30 p.m. at The Lighthouse Pier 61, Chelsea Piers, New York, New York, 10011. President and CEO Cheryl Crazy Bull and her daughter and granddaughter will be on hand to discuss how a higher education is a revolutionary act for Native people along with their own transformative college experiences.

The American Indian College Fund presented at the 2024 National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students Conference

The American Indian College Fund presented at the 2024 National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students Conference

The American Indian College Fund (College Fund) presented at the 2024 National Institute for the Study of Transfer Students Conference. Nicolette Weston, College Fund Program Administrator for Transfer and Admissions, partnered with Juan Perez and Joey DiTonno of the Tribal College Transfer Advisory Committee to lead a session titled “Building Equity and Transfer Success with Underrepresented Populations.”