University of Bridgeport — A Saved University That Was Finally Carved Up and Absorbed
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.