Sisters' college
The examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (December 2010) |
A sisters' college is a college that primarily serves as a place for the education of future and current sisters and nuns. They are not to be confused with Catholic women's colleges, which are designed for general education programs and do not consider the education of nuns to be their focus.
Also known as "sister formation colleges," sisters' colleges are operated by congregations of religious women, such as the Sisters of Christian Charity or the Apostles of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Catholic Sisters' College was founded and operated by The Catholic University of America located in Washington, D.C..[1][2] Historically, they have made at least some of their courses open to lay women, and also men in some cases. Most feature a convent on their premises.
Although previously prevalent across the United States, there is only one currently in operation there, that being the Assumption College for Sisters in Mendham, New Jersey. Catholic women's colleges now serve as the primary providers of education to nuns in the United States, while many of the former sisters' colleges provide campuses for convents and other religious institutions, or have been transitioned into K-12 schools.
List of sisters' colleges[]
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The following is a list of current and historical sisters' colleges. Ones listed in bold are still in operation:
California[]
- , Redwood City (closed, date unknown)
- , Auburn and Burlingame (closed, date unknown)
- , Thousand Oaks (closed c. 1969)
- , Los Gatos (closed in 1971)
- , Fremont, California (closed, date unknown)
Connecticut[]
- Diocesan Sisters College, Bloomfield (closed in 1969)
- , Wilton (closed in 1972)
- Mount Sacred Heart College, Hamden (closed in 1997)
- , Enfield
- , Litchfield (became interfaith retreat center in 1967)
District of Columbia[]
- , Washington, D.C. (closed in 1964)
Florida[]
- Saint Joseph College of Florida, Jensen Beach (began admitting lay students in 1967; closed in 1972)
Idaho[]
- , Cottonwood (closed c. 1997)
Illinois[]
- , (closed, date unknown)
Indiana[]
- , Tipton (closed, 1972)[3]
- , Huntington (closed, date unknown)
Louisiana[]
- , New Orleans (closed, date unknown)
- , St. Benedict (closed, date unknown)
Massachusetts[]
- College of Saint Joseph, Boston (closed, date unknown)
- , Fitchburg (closed in 1971)
Minnesota[]
- , St. Paul (closed, date unknown)
Missouri[]
- Marillac College, St. Louis (closed in 1974)
Nebraska[]
- Servite College, Omaha (closed c. 1990s)
New Jersey[]
- Assumption College for Sisters, Mendham (still sisters' college)
- Englewood Cliffs College, Englewood Cliffs (closed in 1974)
- Felician College, Lodi - Opened in 1923; accepted lay students in 1964.[4]
- , Princeton (closed c. 1980s)
New York[]
- , Brentwood (closed in 1971)
- Catherine McAuley College, Rochester (closed in 1971)
- , Albany (closed in 1969)
- , Castleton (closed in 1973)
- , Middletown (closed, date unknown)
- Trocaire College, Buffalo (began admitting lay women in 1965)
North Dakota[]
- , Fargo (closed, date unknown)
Pennsylvania[]
- , Bensalem (closed, date unknown)
- La Roche College, Pittsburgh - Opened in 1963 as a sisters' college; accepted lay students in 1965.[5]
Rhode Island[]
- , Wakefield (closed, date unknown)
South Dakota[]
- , Huron (closed, date unknown)
Texas[]
- , Corpus Christi (closed in 1965)
- , Houston (closed, date unknown)
Utah[]
- College of Saint Mary-of-the-Wasatch, Salt Lake City (closed in 1969)
Wisconsin[]
- , Milwaukee (closed, date unknown)
- Holy Family College, Manitowoc (began admitting lay women in 1957)
- , Milwaukee (closed, date unknown)
- Viterbo University, La Crosse (began admitting lay women in 1934)
See also[]
- List of current and historical women's universities and colleges
- Women's colleges in the United States
References[]
- ^ “Meetings of the Board of Trustees of the Catholic Sisters College, 1914-1947, Vol. 1,” 13, American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives, The Catholic University of America, Catholic Sisters College Records, Box 1 Certificate of Incorporation (Carbon Copy), January 31, 1914
- ^ “Minutes of the Meetings of the [CUA] Board of Trustees,” 23, “Abstract from Minutes of the Regular Meeting of the Board of Trustees of the Catholic University of America,” April 15, 1914, American Catholic History Research Center and University Archives, The Catholic University of America
- ^ Catholic Moment
- ^ Archdiocese of Newark
- ^ La Roche College Archived 2008-10-26 at the Wayback Machine
- Sisters' colleges
- Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns
- Catholic universities and colleges in the United States
- Women's universities and colleges in the United States
- Universities and colleges by type