The College of Saint Rose was a private college in Albany, New York. It was founded in 1920 by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet as a Catholic women's college, and it became fully co-educational in the 1969-1970 academic year. The following year, the college added laypersons to its board and became an independent college sponsored by the Sisters of St. Joseph. The college was located in the Pine Hills neighborhood of Albany. It was a Division II member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).
In June 2023, after many years of financial difficulties, the college's accreditor, the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, publicly warned the college that it was in danger of losing its accreditation. The college closed in June 2024.
History
The idea for The College of Saint Rose was conceived by Monsignor Joseph A. Delaney, the vicar general of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany, in 1920. Delaney contacted Sister Blanche Rooney, a member of the local chapter of the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Carondelet, located in the Provincial House on Eighth Street in Troy, New York. Rooney and her sisters were receptive to the idea and, with the permission and support of Bishop of AlbanyEdmund F. Gibbons and Rooney, Delaney purchased the William Keeler estate at 979 Madison Avenue. The College of Saint Rose was established as a Catholic college for women with a liberal arts curriculum in Albany, New York when it received a provisional charter from the Board of Regents on June 28, 1920.[2] In the fall semester of 1920, the college opened for classes. At that time, the Albany Times Union stated that the "'sweeping lawns, a grove of pines, and a tennis court [make] the site an ideal one for its new purpose'". The Sisters of St. Joseph were responsible for the college; the Rev. Mother Rosina was named its first dean, while Bishop Edmund Gibbons was named its honorary president.[3]
The college's founders selected its name to honor the first canonized saint in the Americas, Saint Rose of Lima. Initially, emphasis was placed on the professional training of teachers, but it quickly expanded to include preparation for business and other professions.[4][5][better source needed]
The college created an evening division in 1946 to serve World War II veterans. By 1950, the college opened a graduate school.[4][better source needed] The college became fully coeducational in the 1969-1970 academic year.[3] In 1970, 10 laypersons were added to the board of trustees, and the college became an independent college that was sponsored by the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Carondelet but was no longer under the Sisters' control.[6] Campus housing was made available to male students in the 1970s.[4][better source needed]
Financial challenges
Between 1999 and 2015, the college purchased 68 properties, tripling the size of its campus. These purchases cost $12 million. During the same period, the college spent an additional $100 million upgrading and improving the properties it acquired, taking on significant debt.[7] Between 2008 and 2015, enrollment at the college decreased by 16 percent.[3]
In December 2015, the college announced plans to eliminate 27 academic programs and 23 faculty positions. The eliminated programs enrolled four percent of the student body, and 12 of the academic programs contained no enrollees.[8][9] Two months later, the faculty of the college passed a "no confidence" motion in regard to college President Carolyn J. Stefanco.[10] Also in 2016, the college announced its largest-ever incoming class of 658 students.[3] An investigatory committee of the American Association of University Professors concluded that the college's layoffs "violated shared governance and undermined tenure and academic freedom" and "violated the association's principles and standards".[11] Stefanco left her post in 2020.[12][13]
In 2020, the college made $8 million in administrative budget cuts[14] to address a COVID pandemic-related budget gap.[3] In December of that year, the college announced that it would eliminate 16 bachelor's degree programs, six master's degree programs, and three certificate programs as a cost-saving measure. In December 2021, four professors who were terminated in connection with the 2020 downsizing won a lawsuit against the college and were reinstated. A New York state court found that the college had not acted in accordance with its own faculty handbook.[15] However, in October 2022, this decision was overturned by the Appellate Division of the state Supreme Court's Third Department.[16]
In June 2023, the college's accreditor, the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, warned the college that its accreditation was "in jeopardy" due to financial difficulties. The commission gave the college six months to address the commission's concerns.[17] By October, Fitch Ratings assessed the school's bond rating as "BB",[18] which is described as "non-investment grade speculative". In November, the college asked state lawmakers for emergency funding to avoid a closure.[19]
Closure
On November 30, 2023, the Albany Times Union reported that the board of trustees had voted to close the College of Saint Rose following the spring semester of 2024.[20][19] College President Marcia White cited challenging factors that she said were affecting many small independent institutions, particularly in the Northeastern United States, such as years of declining enrollment and the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.[21] Students protested the planned closure.[22]
On February 15, 2024, the college informed the New York State Department of Labor that the college's 646 employees would lose their jobs in the coming months.[23]
The college held its final commencement ceremony on May 11, 2024.[3] The last day of instruction was June 21, 2024, with all operations scheduled to cease by the end of December 2024.[24] The closure of the college led to 87 properties in Albany sitting vacant.[20]
On October 10, 2024, the college filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.[25] The campus was sold to the Albany County Land Authority for $35 million on December 12, 2024, pending final approval from the bankruptcy court.[26]
The campus of The College of Saint Rose was located in the Pine Hills neighborhood of Albany, the capital city of New York. The 46-acre campus was bounded by Western Avenue to the north, Partridge Street to the east, Morris Street to the south, and Main Avenue to the west, although there was college property north of Western and east of Partridge. Over the years, the college acquired many of the Victorian-era homes adjacent to the main campus. Many of these structures, most of which are located on Madison Avenue, Partridge Street, and Western Avenue, were converted into offices and student housing.[29] The expansion of the college into the surrounding neighborhood occasionally led to conflict with local neighborhood and historic conservation associations.[30][31]
St. Joseph Hall is a four-story English brick building with limestone trim fronted by six Corinthian columns. It is located at 985 Madison Avenue between the Science Center to the west and Moran Hall to the east. The structure was built in 1922 at a cost of half a million dollars due to a need for classroom and dining space to house the growing student body. As the first academic building constructed specifically for the college, St. Joseph Hall originally included an auditorium, classrooms, chapel, dormitory, a dining area and kitchens in the basement.[32]
The Massry Center for the Arts features the Kathleen McManus Picotte Recital Hall, the Esther Massry Gallery, and the William Randolph Hearst Music Wing. This building served as the primary venue for concerts and exhibitions by the college's students and faculty, and as a performance and exhibition space for artists, musicians, vocalists and orchestras. The Massry Center received a LEED gold award for being one of the most energy-efficient buildings in the Capital Region.[33]
The College of Saint Rose was a Division II member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), offering 19 varsity intercollegiate sports at the NCAA Division II level.[34][better source needed] Shortly before 2000, Saint Rose became a member of the Northeast-10 Conference (NE-10). The school's primary colors were white and gold, but black and gold were the colors used for marketing purposes. The school's NCAA Division II sports teams were referred to as the Golden Knights. Controversy arose when the Vegas Golden Knights joined the National Hockey League in 2017. At that time, the college raised objections that led to the denial of Vegas's trademark application. Vegas's trademark application was later approved on appeal.[35]
In 2009, the Saint Rose women's soccer became the third team in Northeast-10 Conference history (1985) to win three consecutive postseason league titles. The team's season record was 24–1, and it was ranked fourth in the United States at season's end.[36]
Sports complex
The college's Christian Plumeri Sports Complex was constructed at a cost of $4.7 million.[37] The college's funding for the complex included a $1 million challenge contribution from Joe Plumeri, chairman and CEO of Willis Group Holdings and the college's 2006 commencement speaker. The complex was named in honor of Plumeri's deceased son.[38][39][40]
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