Joe Biden said last year that he kicked off his academic career at Delaware State University, a historically black university, but the institution has now denied that claim.
Biden made the declaration before the South Carolina Democratic primary - which he won by a landslide - during an October 2019 town hall event at Wilson High School in Florence
'I got started out of an HBCU, Delaware State — now, I don’t want to hear anything negative about Delaware State. They’re my folks,' Biden told the crowd.
But a spokesperson for Delaware State University has now denied that the Democratic presidential nominee was a student at the school, The Washington Times reported
'Vice President Biden did not attend DSU,' Carlos Holmes, Director of News Services, told the publication.
'However he was the Commencement keynote speaker in 2003 and [2016], and during the former he was awarded an honorary doctoral degree.'
Joe Biden (pictured) said at a October 2019 town hall event that he 'got started out of an HBCU' in reference to Delaware State University
Delaware State University is one of 107 Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) open in the US and is ranked No. 11 on the US News & World Report HBCU rankings.
The institution sits about 50 miles south of the University of Delaware, where Biden graduated in 1965 after he double majored in political science and history.
The high school was founded in 1866 by the Freedmen's Bureau for black children seeking an education after The Civil War's resolution.
DailyMail.com has reached out to Delaware State University for further comment.
Delaware State University (pictured) spokesperson: 'Vice President Biden did not attend DSU. However he was the Commencement keynote speaker in 2003 and [2016], and during the former he was awarded an honorary doctoral degree'
This month, Biden and his VP pick Kamala Harris appointed Delaware State University President Dr. Tony Allen to serve on the Advisory Council of the Biden Transition Team.
Allen, a former speechwriter in Biden's Senate office, would help 'to ensure the continuity of the government should the former Vice President win the November presidential election.'
In a statement shared to Delaware State University's website, Dr. Allen said he began working for Biden 23 years ago.
Delaware State University President Dr. Tony Allen (right) was brought onto the Advisory Council of the Biden Transition Team
'We met in 1997 when he took a chance on a young, single father completing his graduate studies and asked me to come work in his Senate office, as a speechwriter and a liaison to the City of Wilmington.
'What I didn’t know then was that he would become one of the primary catalysts to my life in public service.'
Dr. Allen added that working with on the Advisory Council was a privilege.
'I could not be more honored and humbled by his invitation to offer counsel and perspective in an unprecedented moment in our nation’s history.'
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