When the school was first created, it was run by Methodist, Presbyterian, and Baptist churches.
By 1843 Sharon College had closed down and the school was under the control of the Mississippi Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
[1] It was reincorporated as "Sharon Female College" in February, 1846.
[2] The school averaged over 90 students per year, but most did not graduate.
[3] The college survived the Civil War, but declined quickly after the war ended due to the economic stresses that had been put on the region.