Mills College, a historic women’s college in Oakland, California, traced its founding to 1852 and ceased to exist as an independent, degree-granting institution in 2022, when it was folded into Northeastern University and renamed Mills College at Northeastern University. It was, by its own reckoning, the oldest women’s college west of the Rockies — a small, fiercely identified liberal-arts college that had spent 170 years educating women, and that had, in 1990, become legendary for refusing to stop. After the merger, the campus remained open and the Mills name survived as a college-within-a-university, but the independent institution, and its single-sex mission, did not: the new entity admits men.
For most of its life Mills was the kind of college that depended on tuition and devotion in roughly equal measure, and it never built the endowment to outlast a long enrollment slide. Applications fell sharply in the 2010s; in May 2017 the board declared a “financial emergency,” with an operating deficit of more than $9 million and an enrollment that had dropped below 1,000. Years of cuts, layoffs of tenured faculty, and curricular reform narrowed the gap but never closed it, and the pandemic finished what demographics had started. In March 2021, the president, Elizabeth Hillman, announced that Mills would stop admitting new degree-seeking undergraduates and grant its last degrees in 2023, reconstituting itself as the non-degree “Mills Institute.”
That announcement read as a death notice, and it galvanized the alumnae who had once saved the college. Six months later, in September 2021, the board chose a different ending: a merger with Northeastern, the Boston-based global university, which would keep the Oakland campus open and operating. The deal was fought in court — the Alumnae Association of Mills College sued for the financial records behind the decision and to pause the vote — but the injunctions were lifted, the trustees approved the merger, and on July 1, 2022 it became official.
What Mills represents in the closure era is the gentler verdict, and the more ambiguous grief. It was not abandoned mid-semester; its campus was not auctioned for parts; its name was not erased. It was absorbed — preserved in form and dissolved in substance — and its alumnae have been split ever since between relief that the place survives and sorrow that the institution they fought for is gone. The college that once reversed its own board now lives on as a name inside someone else’s university.
Marlboro College, a tiny progressive liberal-arts college on a hilltop in Marlboro, Vermont, was founded in 1946 and ceased to exist as an independent institution in 2020, when it transferred its endowment, its faculty, and its name to Emerson College in Boston and sold the Vermont campus that had been its entire reason for being. Its programs and faculty survive inside Emerson as the Marlboro Institute for Liberal Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies; the self-governing rural college, with its Town Meetings and its hand-built community, does not. It was absorbed — preserved as a curriculum and a name, dissolved as a place.
Marlboro was never meant to be large, and its smallness was both its glory and its ruin. Founded by World War II veterans who wanted an experiment in democratic education, it built a model unlike almost any other in America: students and faculty and staff governed the college together in a literal Town Meeting, and each student designed an individualized course of study — the “Plan of Concentration” — culminating in a senior thesis defended before an outside examiner. At its high-water mark, around 2004, roughly 350 students lived on the hill. By the end there were about 150. A college that small, tuition-dependent, and remote could not survive the demographic decline that emptied small colleges across the Northeast.
The board first tried to merge with the University of Bridgeport in 2019; those talks collapsed within months. In November 2019 it announced a different arrangement with Emerson College, the Boston communications-and-arts institution. Rather than a conventional acquisition, Marlboro made Emerson a gift: it handed over its endowment, valued at more than $30 million, and the proceeds from selling its campus, in exchange for a guarantee that Marlboro’s roughly two dozen tenured and tenure-track faculty would have appointments at Emerson and that its students could finish there. The deal closed on July 23, 2020.
What Marlboro represents is the merger as inheritance rather than rescue — a dying college choosing not merely to fold into another but to endow it, buying continuity for its faculty and a fragment of its pedagogy at the cost of the institution itself. The Vermont campus, sold off, passed through several hands. The Town Meetings ended. The independent college that had governed itself for seventy-four years voted, in effect, one last time: to give itself away.
Pine Manor College, a small private college on a wooded campus in the Chestnut Hill section of Brookline, Massachusetts, founded in 1911, ceased to exist as an independent institution in 2020, when it was acquired by its far larger neighbor, Boston College. By the time the pandemic forced the decision, Pine Manor had remade itself into something unusual and valuable: a minority-serving institution where most students were the first in their families to attend college and many were low-income. Boston College took the campus, the assets, and the liabilities, taught out the remaining students, and built the Pine Manor name into a new Pine Manor Institute for Student Success. The college was absorbed — its mission preserved as a program inside a Jesuit research university, its independent existence ended.
Pine Manor’s history is a study in reinvention. It began in 1911 as a post-secondary division of the Dana Hall School, a finishing-school-era institution where the all-female student body once posed for class photographs in long white dresses. It became an independent junior college, then a four-year women’s college, then — under a deliberate change of mission in the 1990s — pivoted from educating the daughters of the social elite to educating women of color from underserved communities. It went fully coeducational in 2014. By the end it served a few hundred students, a majority first-generation and low-income, on a 45-plus-acre estate five miles from downtown Boston.
The reinvention was admirable and the finances were perilous. Pine Manor had a tiny endowment — about $8.7 million, much of it restricted — and depended heavily on auxiliary revenue: a daycare, summer English-language programs, weddings and corporate events. Roughly half its operating revenue came from those activities. When COVID-19 shut down campus life in the spring of 2020, that revenue evaporated overnight, and a college that had warned its own students about its uncertain future could no longer guarantee a fall opening. On May 13, 2020, Boston College announced it would take over.
Pine Manor represents the acquisition as both rescue and dissolution. Boston College, with a $2.4 billion endowment, absorbed Pine Manor’s roughly $11 million in liabilities, kept current students on the Chestnut Hill campus for up to two years to finish their degrees, and endowed the Pine Manor Institute for Student Success with $50 million to extend Pine Manor’s first-generation, low-income mission inside BC. The college that had reinvented itself to serve the students higher education most often overlooks ended by handing that mission, and its name, to a university with the resources to sustain it.
Cabrini University, a small Catholic institution in Radnor, Pennsylvania, founded in 1957 by the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, conferred its final degrees in May 2024 and ceased operations at the end of that academic year. It did not collapse mid-semester or lock its gates without warning. Instead, in June 2023 — nearly a full year out — it announced that it would close after the 2023–24 year and that its 112-acre campus would pass to its far larger neighbor, Villanova University, two miles up the road. Villanova formally assumed ownership on June 28, 2024. The result is the gentlest verdict in this archive’s vocabulary and one of its saddest: a 67-year-old university, named for the first American saint, dissolved into the property of another.
The arithmetic was unambiguous well before the announcement. Cabrini had run operating deficits for nine consecutive years, from 2013 through 2022; the gap had widened to more than $10 million on a budget of roughly $45 million, and the university carried close to $49 million in debt by mid-2022, prompting a Standard & Poor’s downgrade that autumn. Enrollment, which had peaked around 2,360 students in 2016–17, had slid roughly a third by the time the board acted — a familiar fate for a tuition-dependent college with little endowment cushion, selling a four-year residential education in a saturated Philadelphia-area market against wealthier competitors, in the long demographic shadow of the pandemic.
The deal was less a rescue than a dignified wind-down with a buyer attached. Villanova agreed to retire roughly $45 million of Cabrini’s debt and to spend an estimated $25 million more on improvements, taking the campus for its own expansion. Cabrini’s students were not the asset; the real estate was. The university arranged transfer partnerships with Holy Family, Gwynedd Mercy, and Eastern Universities so that students could finish their degrees elsewhere, and Villanova pledged to consider Cabrini employees for its own openings — soft cushions, but not continuity.
What Cabrini represents is the acquisition as exit: an institution that saw the end coming, negotiated from what little strength it had left, and protected its students and its mission’s memory at the price of its own existence. The campus survives, rechristened the Villanova University Cabrini Campus; the Missionary Sisters extracted a promise to honor Mother Cabrini’s legacy; the final Mass was said by Villanova’s president, not Cabrini’s. The buildings are full of plans. The university that built them over 67 years is gone.
Bloomfield College, a small, fiercely diverse college in Bloomfield, New Jersey, founded in 1868 out of the Presbyterian tradition, ceased to exist as an independent institution on July 1, 2023, when it merged into the public Montclair State University and became Bloomfield College of Montclair State University. It was the first merger of a private college into a public university in New Jersey history — a novel kind of rescue for a novel kind of institution. By the end Bloomfield was the closest thing New Jersey had to a historically Black college: the only four-year school in the state designated simultaneously a Predominantly Black Institution, a Hispanic-Serving Institution, and a Minority-Serving Institution, with a student body that was nearly half Black and a third Hispanic, overwhelmingly low-income and first-generation.
That mission is exactly why its near-death and its rescue both mattered so much. In October 2021, with enrollment fallen from roughly 2,000 in 2016 to about 1,300 and a tuition-dependent budget bleeding money, President Marcheta Evans did something colleges almost never do: she went public, announcing that Bloomfield might not survive the next academic year and openly asking institutions, corporations, and the state for help. The plea worked. New Jersey appropriated $12.5 million in transitional funding to keep the doors open through 2022–23, and Montclair State University, a much larger public research university about ten miles away, stepped in as a partner — first as a lifeline, then as the institution Bloomfield would join.
The merger moved with unusual speed and required machinery a private failure usually does not: accreditor approval from the Middle States Commission, and an act of the New Jersey Legislature, which Governor Phil Murphy signed on June 30, 2023, the day before the merger took effect. Montclair offered positions to nearly 90 percent of Bloomfield’s faculty and staff, kept the campus open, retained the athletics programs and the Bears mascot, and — crucially — preserved the minority-serving mission that had made Bloomfield singular.
What Bloomfield represents is absorption as deliverance, and the rarest version of it: a public university taking on a private one not for its real estate but, substantially, to keep its students and its mission alive. The independent college is gone; its name survives as a college within a state university, its students pay public-tuition rates, and the institution that might have closed instead became the first of its kind. It is, in this archive, almost a happy ending — almost, because the 155-year-old college still ended.
Concordia College, a small Lutheran institution in Bronxville, New York, founded in 1881 and run by the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod, announced on January 28, 2021 that it would cease operations that summer, and its Bronxville campus passed to its Catholic neighbor, Iona College, three miles away in New Rochelle. This is the Bronxville Concordia, distinct from the network of LCMS Concordias scattered across the country — not Concordia Portland, the largest of them, which had collapsed a year earlier, nor Concordia Selma, the historically Black Lutheran college in Alabama that had closed in 2018. It was, in fact, the fourth Concordia to close or merge in eight years, and the manner of its ending — an acquisition by a Roman Catholic institution that absorbed the campus and taught out the students — gives it its own clinical interest.
The mechanism was the now-familiar one, accelerated by the pandemic. Concordia was a tuition-dependent college with a long history of thin finances; its accreditor had flagged its position as precarious as far back as 1987, and rising tuition discounts and operating costs had ground at it for years. Enrollment, which stood near 1,300 in 2019–20, was nearly halved by COVID-19 — falling to roughly 580 by spring 2021 — and a college that small, that dependent on tuition, and that short on reserves could not survive the collapse. The board concluded that closure was the only honest course.
What it arranged was an acquisition rather than a stranding. In an agreement reached on May 11, 2021, Iona College — a larger Catholic institution nearby — took the Bronxville campus and committed to a teach-out so that Concordia’s students could complete their degrees. Concordia ceased academic instruction before the fall 2021 semester; that October it petitioned a Westchester court to formalize the $30 million sale of its main campus to Iona. Iona itself became Iona University on July 1, 2022, and went on to build the NewYork-Presbyterian Iona School of Nursing and Health Sciences on the former Concordia grounds.
What Concordia Bronxville represents is the acquisition as a managed end for a college that had run out of room: a 140-year-old Lutheran institution, absorbed campus and student body into a Catholic university that needed space to grow. The buildings remain in use; the cross on them is now a different denomination’s. The college that taught generations of Lutherans on that hill is gone in everything but the deed history.
The University of the Sciences, a small specialized university in the University City district of Philadelphia, traced its origins to 1821 and ceased to exist as an independent institution on June 1, 2022, when it merged into Saint Joseph’s University, the Jesuit university roughly five miles up the road. It was the oldest pharmacy school in the United States — founded as the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy when sixty-eight apothecaries met in Carpenters’ Hall to raise the standards of their trade — and for two centuries it had trained the people who compounded and dispensed the nation’s medicine, including, in 1883, the first American woman to earn a pharmacy degree. The name is gone; the work it pioneered continues inside someone else’s institution.
The mechanics were the now-familiar arithmetic of the specialized college. USciences was tuition-dependent and narrowly focused, and it ran into a double squeeze: a national decline in pharmacy-school applications and the broader demographic pressure on every small private college in the Northeast. By 2018 it was carrying a budget deficit of around $4.5 million; in 2020 both Fitch and Moody’s downgraded its credit as it drew down its endowment at a rate analysts called unsustainable. In the summer of 2020 the university began, in its own framing, to look for a partner with the scale to carry its programs into the future.
It found one across town. Under the agreement completed in June 2022, Saint Joseph’s absorbed the entirety of USciences — its academic programs, its 24-acre University City campus, its assets and its liabilities — with no money changing hands. Saint Joseph’s retained about 140 of USciences’ roughly 170 faculty (the rest received a full year’s salary in severance), folded the health programs into a new College of Health Professions, and emerged as one of the ten largest universities in the Philadelphia region, with an endowment north of $500 million and nearly 9,000 students.
What USciences represents is the merger as a soft landing for a small but venerable institution — and the quiet completeness of absorption. No class was stranded; the buildings are full; the Philadelphia College of Pharmacy continues by name as a school within Saint Joseph’s. But the independent university that incorporated standards for an entire profession in 1821, that issued degrees in its own right for two centuries, no longer exists. Its red-devil mascot was retired; the hawk flies over its campus now.
Wesley College, a small private college in Dover, Delaware, founded in 1873, ceased to exist as an independent institution on July 1, 2021, when its neighbor a few blocks away — the public, historically Black Delaware State University — completed its acquisition. The transaction was a landmark: by Delaware State’s account, it was the first time a historically Black college or university had acquired another higher-education institution outright. A 148-year-old, Methodist-heritage, predominantly white private college was absorbed into a public HBCU, an inversion of the usual direction of college consolidation and a genuine reversal of historical fortune.
Wesley’s decline followed the standard script for a small tuition-dependent college, accelerated by a steep price tag. It had grown to roughly 2,000 students in better years but slid hard in the late 2010s, and by 2019 its finances were so precarious that without a $3 million state grant its students would have lost access to federal financial aid. The state of Delaware ultimately contributed around $6 million over two years to keep the doors open while Wesley searched for a partner; it talked with Saint Leo University in Florida and with the University of Delaware before the deal with Delaware State, its literal neighbor in downtown Dover, came together.
Under the agreement finalized in mid-2021, Delaware State took over Wesley’s roughly 50-acre downtown campus and its 21 buildings — capital assets appraised near $32 million — by assuming Wesley’s debts rather than paying cash. It gained 14 academic programs, including a master’s in occupational therapy, and folded them into a new Wesley College of Health and Behavioral Sciences, honoring the old name in the new structure. Crucially, the merger gave Wesley’s students a path: nearly 80 percent registered to continue at Delaware State, drawn in part by tuition roughly half of what Wesley had charged, and 71 Wesley faculty and staff were offered positions.
What Wesley represents is the merger as both rescue and reversal. Its students were not stranded; its campus did not go dark; its name lives on as a college within Delaware State. But the independent Methodist-heritage college that had served Dover for nearly a century and a half is gone, dissolved into a public university with a different mission and a historic ambition to grow. For Delaware State, the acquisition was a jump-start. For Wesley, it was a dignified end.
Marymount Manhattan College, a small liberal-arts college on the Upper East Side of New York City, founded in 1936, agreed in May 2024 to merge into Northeastern University, ending its independence and beginning its conversion into Northeastern University – New York City, the fourteenth campus in Northeastern’s global system. Founded by the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary as a women’s college and long since independent and non-sectarian in practice, MMC had built a national reputation in theatre, dance, and the performing arts — a college that trained working actors a short walk from Broadway. The 2024 agreement, ratified by both boards, marked the institution’s decisive end as an autonomous college; the regulatory machinery to finalize it would run on into 2025 and 2026.
The forces behind the decision were the familiar ones, worn smooth by repetition across this archive. MMC was tuition-dependent and small, and its enrollment had eroded: from roughly 2,000 students before the pandemic — its high-water mark, reached around 2017 with students from 48 states and 36 countries — to about 1,400 by the time of the merger announcement. The college framed the move as a choice made from a position of strength rather than crisis, noting it had posted positive revenue in nine of its ten most recent fiscal years and had spent two years studying its strategic options before acting. But the trajectory was unmistakable, and the conclusion its leaders reached was that its mission would be better sustained inside a large, well-capitalized university than alone.
For Northeastern, the appeal was equally clear and somewhat colder: a Manhattan foothold and a campus of real value. The deal added the East 71st Street property — land and buildings later valued at roughly $215 million — to Northeastern’s balance sheet, and reporting in 2026 described an overall gain to Northeastern of more than $200 million from the transaction. Northeastern pledged to preserve and expand MMC’s signature creative and performing-arts programs, which it said had been constrained by MMC’s limited investment capacity, and began sending its own students to the campus in fall 2025 ahead of the closing.
What MMC represents is the merger as a planned, unforced exit — the rarer, more deliberate cousin of the desperation deal. No class was stranded; the campus stays open; the performing-arts programs that defined the college may well grow. But the independent college that had stood on the Upper East Side for nearly nine decades will not exist as itself; it becomes a New York City campus of a Boston-based university. The name on East 71st Street will change. The grief, as with all the absorbed, is the quiet kind.
The University of Bridgeport, founded in 1927 as the Junior College of Connecticut and chartered as a four-year university in 1947, ceased to exist as an independent institution in 2021, when its programs, students, buildings, and accreditation were divided among Goodwin University, Sacred Heart University, and Paier College — with Goodwin ultimately absorbing the bulk of what remained. For nearly a century it had been the largest private university in the state’s largest industrial city, and it ended not in a single dramatic closure but as the last act of a slow, multi-decade decline, its assets parceled out among healthier neighbors and the name kept on as a Goodwin-owned subsidiary.
Bridgeport’s arc tracks the rise and fall of its city. The university grew explosively in the postwar decades, riding the baby boom, the G.I. Bill, and a wave of international students to a peak of roughly 9,100 students in 1969. Then the same deindustrialization that hollowed out Bridgeport, Connecticut hollowed out its university: enrollment slid through the 1970s and 1980s until, by 1990, more than a third of the campus’s fifty buildings sat empty and debt had climbed past $22 million. Tuition cuts did not help. By 1991 enrollment had fallen to around 1,300, a two-year faculty strike was under way, and accreditation was at risk.
The rescue that followed is the part of the story most people remember. In May 1992, the Professors World Peace Academy — an affiliate of Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church — injected $50.5 million into the failing university in exchange for a majority of the board’s seats, a deal the university’s charter effectively forced its trustees to consider. The arrangement kept the doors open and the accreditation intact, but it cost Bridgeport much of its faculty and, for years, its reputation; sixty-six professors and librarians took compensated departures. The university received Academy funding until 2002, became financially independent in 2003, and in 2019 voted the last of the Academy’s governance rights out of its bylaws.
What independence could not fix was the underlying decline. By 2020 the university, still small and still strained, agreed to dismantle itself in an orderly way — a three-way deal to hand its programs to Goodwin, Sacred Heart, and Paier. Sacred Heart withdrew, Goodwin absorbed the larger share, and in 2021 the institution that had survived bankruptcy, a strike, and a church takeover finally dissolved into others. Absorbed, not closed: the students kept studying and the name survived on the buildings, but the independent University of Bridgeport was gone.
On July 1, 2022, six universities in the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education — California, Clarion, and Edinboro in the west; Bloomsburg, Lock Haven, and Mansfield in the central and northern tiers — ceased to exist as independent institutions. The three western schools were consolidated into a single new entity, Pennsylvania Western University, known as PennWest; the three central schools became Commonwealth University of Pennsylvania. Six historic names, most of them rooted in nineteenth-century normal schools that had trained Pennsylvania’s teachers for generations, were retired into two. The campuses stayed open and the students stayed enrolled, but six distinct universities became two.
The lifespan here belongs not to a single institution but to a lineage. The oldest of the six, Bloomsburg, traced its roots to 1839; the others followed across the middle decades of the nineteenth century — California (1852), Edinboro (1857), Mansfield (1857), Clarion (1867), Lock Haven (1870) — almost all of them founded as academies or normal schools to supply teachers to a growing commonwealth. Over more than a century and a half they grew into comprehensive regional public universities, the affordable four-year option for the rural and small-town students in their corners of the state. By 2022, when they were merged away, the entire fourteen-school PASSHE system enrolled roughly 88,700 students, down sharply from a peak above 119,000 a decade earlier.
The mechanism was demographic and budgetary, not scandalous. Pennsylvania, like much of the Northeast, faced a shrinking pool of high-school graduates, and the state system’s enrollment had fallen by roughly a fifth across the 2010s. Smaller campuses were hardest hit, running structural deficits that the system could no longer cover. In July 2021 the PASSHE board of governors voted 18–0 to consolidate the six into two, blending their administrations, faculties, and academic catalogs while keeping each physical campus operating under a shared accreditation and a single university name.
What was lost is harder to photograph than a padlocked college, but it is real: six institutions with their own histories, mascots, alumni loyalties, and place in their towns were subsumed into regional umbrellas. The early returns were sobering — in its first year PennWest lost nearly 12 percent of the enrollment its three predecessors had carried — suggesting that consolidation slowed the bleeding without stopping it. The campuses survive. The universities, as they were, do not.
The Vermont State Colleges System spent the years between 2018 and 2023 erasing its own member institutions, and on July 1, 2023 the last of the old names went dark when Castleton University, Northern Vermont University, and Vermont Technical College were fused into a single accredited institution called Vermont State University. The oldest thread in that braid reached back to 1787, when the Rutland County Grammar School — the seed of what became Castleton — was chartered, making Castleton Vermont’s oldest college. The consolidation did not close a campus or padlock a quad. It dissolved the separate institutions that had stood on those campuses for as long as two centuries, and replaced them with branches of one statewide university.
The consolidation came in two waves. In 2018, Johnson State College (rooted in an 1828 school) and Lyndon State College (founded 1911) were merged into Northern Vermont University, a single institution with two campuses in Vermont’s rural Northeast Kingdom. Five years later, that university — together with Castleton and Vermont Technical College, founded in 1866 — was folded into Vermont State University, a five-campus institution spanning Castleton, Johnson, Lyndon, Randolph, and Williston. The Community College of Vermont remained separate. What had been a confederation of distinctly named, locally rooted colleges became one brand with one accreditation and one administration.
The driver was money and demography in equal measure. The system carried a structural deficit reported at roughly $25 million, and enrollment had been sliding for years as Vermont’s pool of high-school graduates shrank — the New England version of the national enrollment cliff. State leaders chose consolidation over closure, betting that a single university sharing administration, branding, and back-office functions could survive where four or five separate tuition-dependent colleges could not. The Vermont legislature backed the gamble with tens of millions in one-time funding, and the New England Commission of Higher Education accredited the combined institution in July 2022, clearing the path to the 2023 launch.
What made the Vermont case notorious was not the merger itself but the early days of the institution it produced. In early 2023, months before the official launch, the new university’s leadership announced plans to convert campus libraries to “all-digital” collections and to downgrade NCAA athletics. The backlash — student protests, a faculty no-confidence vote, national press — forced reversals on both, and the founding president, Parwinder Grewal, resigned after barely a year. The institutions that had stood for as long as 236 years were gone in name; the university built to replace them began its life apologizing.