Campaign Aims to Give Student Veterans New Campus Home

Ignite Ole Miss effort seeks funds for renovations, furnishings and supplies

UM alumni and friends can support an Ignite Ole Miss campaign to help with furnishings for the George Street House, new home of the Office of Veteran and Military Services and the Veterans Resource Center. Photo by Nathan Latil/Ole Miss Digital Imaging Services

OXFORD, Miss. – A new online fundraising campaign launched by the University of Mississippi intends to welcome student veterans to new headquarters in the George Street House in the heart of campus.

The university earlier announced that both the Office of Veteran and Military Services and the Veterans Resource Center would move into one building – a historic house in a premier location. However, the house needs a few cosmetic renovations, in addition to furniture, rugs, window treatments, computers, kitchen supplies, new light fixtures and more before it is ready for the move at the end of the year.

An Ignite Ole Miss campaign has begun to help fund those improvements at https://ignite.olemiss.edu/veterans.

Disabled veterans had trouble accessing the previous locations and traveling daily between the two offices proved inefficient for everyone, said Andrew Newby, assistant director of veteran and military services. The move to the George Street House solves those issues.

“I can’t think of a more fitting place to welcome our student veterans than the heart of campus in the George Street House,” Newby said. “It will be a one-stop shop where student veterans can meet with each other, receive the services that they need, and unwind and connect with their peers.”

The new location further expands other ongoing efforts to support the thriving community of veteran students that have led to the university being ranked among the nation’s best places for vets to pursue a degree.

UM is the No. 53-ranked public university in the Military Times “Best for Vets: Top Colleges 2020.” It’s also one of only five Southeastern Conference schools recognized in the ranking.

Once renovations on the George Street House are completed, the location will offer study spaces, computers, printers, a kitchen and a living room, Newby said. Newby and other professionals also will offer help with VA disability claims, housing, employment and more.

“Anything a student veteran needs to be successful, they can do within our new location,” Newby said.

Jamie King – a paratrooper in the 82nd Airborne Division of the U.S. Army, combat veteran and officer in the Student Veterans Association at Ole Miss – said student veterans need the help of peers to ease the transition from the military to academia. Shared spaces to congregate make mentorship possible, which is why the George Street House is so important, he said.

“These veterans sacrificed a lot for everyone else: their blood, sweat and tears,” said King, a geology major. “They earned these opportunities available to them at the university. To help foster an environment where they’re going to do the best they possibly can is a game-changer.

“It doesn’t take much help from everybody. It only takes everybody doing a little bit to make a big difference for us.”

Apart from the financial support from the Ole Miss community and friends, the location of the new space shows that the university values its military-affiliated students, said Eli Buguey, a U.S. Navy veteran and journalism graduate student.

“The best part about moving into the George Street House is it really puts a stamp that this school supports veterans,” Buguey said. “Right next to the library, right next to the Lyceum, it is a flag in the center of campus that shows that this is a school that supports veteran students.

“That is a huge heart-warmer to me as a veteran student.”

To contribute to the Welcome Home Veterans campaign, visit https://ignite.olemiss.edu/veterans or contact digital giving officer Angela Atkins at 662-832-7663 or adm1@olemiss.edu.