The only President of the college was James R. Greene, who was also principal of the black Monroe Senior High School.
[1] In 1962 the Carver Junior College building, adjacent to the high school, and funded by the Florida Department of Education, was completed.
The NAACP complained to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights that the college was costing $100,000 per year, enrollment was low, high school teachers and facilities were being used, and educational outcomes were unsatisfactory.
The Carver site operated as a branch of Brevard Community College for the 1963-64 academic year, so existing students could complete the programs they had started.
[5] In the 1990s Brevard Community College named a new building the George Washington Carver Administrative Center, and placed a portrait of President Greene there.