List of university and college mergers in the United States
Encyclopedia
This is a list of mergers of universities and/or colleges in the United States with the name of the surviving institution, predecessors, and effective date.

A through D

  • Alliant International University
    Alliant International University
    Alliant International University is a private, non-profit higher education institution based in San Diego, California. It offers programs in six California cities and four locations outside the United States...

     - merger of California School of Professional Psychology and United States International University, 2001
  • American Sentinel University
    American Sentinel University
    American Sentinel University is a for-profit university, offering distance-learning degree and certificate programs in technology, healthcare and business...

     - merger of American College of Computer & Information Sciences and American Graduate School of Management
  • Argosy University
    Argosy University
    Argosy University is a for-profit university owned by Education Management Corporation, with 19 locations in 13 U.S. states and online. The university offers numerous programs at various levels, including certification; associates, bachelors, masters, specialist, and doctoral degrees, postdoctoral...

     - merger of American Schools of Professional Psychology, the University of Sarasota and the Medical Institute of Minnesota, 2001
  • Azusa Pacific College
    Azusa Pacific University
    Azusa Pacific University is a private, inter-denominational, evangelical Christian university located near Los Angeles in suburban Azusa, California. It was founded in 1899, with classes opening on March 3, 1900 in Whittier, California. It began offering degrees in 1939...

     - absorbed Arlington College, 1968
  • Azusa Pacific College
    Azusa Pacific University
    Azusa Pacific University is a private, inter-denominational, evangelical Christian university located near Los Angeles in suburban Azusa, California. It was founded in 1899, with classes opening on March 3, 1900 in Whittier, California. It began offering degrees in 1939...

     - merger of Azusa College and Los Angeles Pacific College, 1965
  • University of Baltimore
    University of Baltimore
    The University of Baltimore , located in downtown Baltimore, Maryland in the Mt. Vernon neighborhood at 1420 N. Charles Street, is part of the University System of Maryland. Through the Freshman Initiative or Lower Division Initiative, UB has transformed from an upper division university to a...

     - absorbed Eastern College, 1970
  • Benedictine College
    Benedictine College
    Benedictine College is a co-educational university in Atchison, Kansas, founded in 1971 by the merger of St. Benedict's College for men and Mount St. Scholastica College for women. It is a Roman Catholic, Benedictine, liberal arts, and residential college located on bluffs overlooking the...

     - merger of Mount Saint Scholastica College and St. Benedict's College - 1971
  • Big Sandy Community and Technical College
    Big Sandy Community and Technical College
    Big Sandy Community and Technical College , with its headquarters in Prestonsburg, Kentucky, is one of 16 two-year, open-admissions colleges of the Kentucky Community and Technical College System . It was created in 2003 from the consolidation of Prestonsburg Community College and Mayo Technical...

     - merger of Prestonsburg Community College and Mayo Technical College.
  • Birmingham–Southern College - merger of Southern University (Alabama) and Birmingham College in 1918.
  • Boston University
    Boston University
    Boston University is a private research university located in Boston, Massachusetts. With more than 4,000 faculty members and more than 31,000 students, Boston University is one of the largest private universities in the United States and one of Boston's largest employers...

     School of Medicine - absorbed Boston Female Medical School, 1874
  • Brevard College
    Brevard College
    Brevard College is a small, private, United Methodist, liberal arts college in Brevard, North Carolina. The college currently grants the Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Science, or Bachelor of Music degree...

     - merger of Brevard Institute, Weaverville College, and Rutherford College, 1934
  • University of California, Berkeley
    University of California, Berkeley
    The University of California, Berkeley , is a teaching and research university established in 1868 and located in Berkeley, California, USA...

     - merger of the College of California and the Agricultural, Mining, and Mechanical Arts College, 1853
  • Carson-Newman College
    Carson-Newman College
    Carson–Newman College is a historically Baptist liberal arts college located in Jefferson City, Tennessee, United States. Enrollment as of 2006-2007 was about 2,050. The college's students come from 44 U.S. states and 30 other countries. Studies are offered in approximately 90 different academic...

     - merger of Carson College and Newman College for Women, 1889
  • Case Western Reserve University
    Case Western Reserve University
    Case Western Reserve University is a private research university located in Cleveland, Ohio, USA...

     - merger of Case Tech and Western Reserve, 1971–72
  • The Catholic University of America
    The Catholic University of America
    The Catholic University of America is a private university located in Washington, D.C. in the United States. It is a pontifical university of the Catholic Church in the United States and the only institution of higher education founded by the U.S. Catholic bishops...

     - absorbed Columbus University, 1954
  • Central Nazarene College
    Central Nazarene College
    The Central Nazarene College was a junior college located in Hamlin, Texas. It closed in 1929.-History:The school opened as a grammar school, academy, and junior college in 1909 under the leadership of Reverend W. E. Fisher, superintendent of the Abilene and Hamlin districts of the Church of the...

     - absorbed Nazarene Bible Institute
    Nazarene Bible Institute
    Nazarene Bible Institute was a bible college in Pilot Point, Texas. It has since closed.-History:The institute was established 1905 in Pilot Point by the Holiness Church of Christ...

     (1911)
  • Chicago College of Performing Arts
    Chicago College of Performing Arts
    Chicago College of Performing Arts is a performing arts college that is housed at Roosevelt University in Chicago, Illinois. The college has two divisions: the Music Conservatory and the Theatre Conservatory.- History :...

     - absorbed Roosevelt University
    Roosevelt University
    Roosevelt University is a coeducational, private university with campuses in Chicago, Illinois and Schaumburg, Illinois. Founded in 1945, the university is named in honor of both former President Franklin Delano Roosevelt and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. The university's curriculum is based on...

     School of Music, 1954
  • University of Cincinnati
    University of Cincinnati
    The University of Cincinnati is a comprehensive public research university in Cincinnati, Ohio, and a part of the University System of Ohio....

     - absorbed Medical College of Ohio 1896; Cincinnati Law School, absorbed 1896; Cincinnati College of Pharmacy, 1954; Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, absorbed in 1962.
  • Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music - formed by merger of Cincinnati Conservatory of Music
    Cincinnati Conservatory of Music
    The Cincinnati Conservatory of Music was a conservatory, part of a girls' finishing school, founded in 1867 in Cincinnati, Ohio. It merged with the College of Music of Cincinnati in 1955, forming the Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music, which is now part of the University of Cincinnati.The...

     and the College of Music of Cincinnati in 1955.
  • Cincinnati Law School absorbed Cincinnati College in the late 1830s.
  • Clark Atlanta University
    Clark Atlanta University
    Clark Atlanta University is a private, historically black university in Atlanta, Georgia. It was formed in 1988 with the consolidation of Clark College and Atlanta University...

     - merger of Clark College and Atlanta University, 1988
  • Cleveland State University
    Cleveland State University
    Cleveland State University is a public university located in downtown Cleveland, Ohio. It was established in 1964 when the state of Ohio assumed control of Fenn College, and it absorbed the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law in 1969...

     - absorbed Cleveland-Marshall College of Law
    Cleveland-Marshall College of Law
    The Cleveland–Marshall College of Law is the law school of Cleveland State University, located in Cleveland, Ohio. The school traces its origins to the founding of Cleveland Law School in 1897 which, in 1946, merged with the John Marshall School of Law, founded in 1916, to become Cleveland–Marshall...

     in 1969
  • Carnegie Mellon University
    Carnegie Mellon University
    Carnegie Mellon University is a private research university in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States....

     - formed by the merger of Carnegie Institute of Technology
    Carnegie Institute of Technology
    The Carnegie Institute of Technology , is the name for Carnegie Mellon University’s College of Engineering. It was first called the Carnegie Technical Schools, or Carnegie Tech, when it was founded in 1900 by Andrew Carnegie who intended to build a “first class technical school” in Pittsburgh,...

     and the Mellon Institute of Industrial Research
    Mellon Institute of Industrial Research
    Mellon Institute of Industrial Research, founded in 1913 by Andrew W. Mellon and Richard B. Mellon, merged with the Carnegie Institute of Technology in 1967 to form Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States...

  • Davenport University
    Davenport University
    Davenport University is a private, non-profit, multi-location university located at 14 campuses throughout Michigan and online. It was founded in 1866 by Conrad Swensburg and currently offers Master's Degrees, Bachelor's Degrees, Associate's Degrees, diplomas, and post-grad certification programs...

     - merger of Davenport College
    Davenport College
    Davenport College is one of the twelve residential colleges of Yale University. Its buildings were completed in 1933 mainly in the Georgian style but with a gothic façade. The college was named for John Davenport, who founded Yale's home city of New Haven, Connecticut...

    , Detroit College of Business, and Great Lakes College
    Great Lakes College
    Great Lakes College is a co-educational, public secondary school, located in Forster/Tuncurry, New South Wales, a coastal area on the mid-north coast of New South Wales, Australia....

    , 2000.
  • University of Delaware
    University of Delaware
    The university is organized into seven colleges:* College of Agriculture and Natural Resources* College of Arts and Sciences* Alfred Lerner College of Business and Economics* College of Earth, Ocean and Environment* College of Education and Human Development...

     - merger of Newark College and Women's College of Delaware, 1921
  • DePaul University
    DePaul University
    DePaul University is a private institution of higher education and research in Chicago, Illinois. Founded by the Vincentians in 1898, the university takes its name from the 17th century French priest Saint Vincent de Paul...

     - absorbed Barat College
    Barat College
    Barat College of the Sacred Heart was a small Catholic college located in Lake Forest, Illinois, 30 miles north of Chicago. The college was named after Saint Madeleine Sophie Barat, founder of the Society of the Sacred Heart...

    , 2001
  • University of Denver
    University of Denver
    The University of Denver is currently ranked 82nd among all public and private "National Universities" by U.S. News & World Report in the 2012 rankings....

     - absorbed Colorado Women's College
    Colorado Women's College
    Colorado Woman's College was a private woman's college located in Denver, Colorado. It was opened in 1909 and closed in 1982 when its assets were acquired by the University of Denver.-History:CWC was founded by the Rev...

    , 1982
  • University of Detroit Mercy
    University of Detroit Mercy
    University of Detroit Mercy is a private, Roman Catholic co-educational university in Detroit, Michigan, United States, affiliated with the Society of Jesus and the Sisters of Mercy. Antoine M. Garibaldi is the president. With origins dating from 1877, it is the largest Roman Catholic university...

     - merger of University of Detroit and Mercy College, 1990
  • Dillard University
    Dillard University
    Dillard University is a private, historically black liberal arts college in New Orleans, Louisiana. Founded in 1930 incorporating earlier institutions that went back to 1869, it is affiliated with the United Church of Christ and the United Methodist Church....

     - merger of Straight University
    Straight University
    Straight University, after 1915 Straight College, was a historically black college that operated between 1868 and 1934 in New Orleans, Louisiana. It was founded by the American Missionary Association.-Campus:...

     and New Orleans University, 1934

E through K

  • Erskine College
    Erskine College
    Erskine College is a four year, Christian liberal arts college located in Due West, South Carolina.-Early history:Established in 1839 by the Associate Reformed Synod of the South as an academy for men, Erskine College became the first four year, church-related college in South Carolina...

     - absorbed Due West Female College
    Due West Female College
    Due West Female College was a private Presbyterian women's college that operated in Due West, South Carolina, USA from 1859 until 1928, when it merged with Erskine College....

    , 1927
  • Fordham University
    Fordham University
    Fordham University is a private, nonprofit, coeducational research university in the United States, with three campuses in and around New York City. It was founded by the Roman Catholic Diocese of New York in 1841 as St...

     - absorbed Marymount College
    Marymount College, Tarrytown
    Marymount College of Fordham University was a women's college in the United States, eventually to become part of Fordham University. The Marymount campus was located in Tarrytown, New York. Enrollment peaked at 1,112 in 1978, but by 2004 it enrolled 844 students...

    , 2002
  • Gannon University
    Gannon University
    Gannon University is a private, co-educational Catholic university offering associate's, bachelor's, and master's degrees, certificates and doctoral degrees and is located in Erie, Pennsylvania. Gannon University has an alumni base numbering around 31,500. Current enrollment is 4,238.Gannon's...

     - absorbed Villa Marie College, 1989
  • The George Washington University
    George Washington University
    The George Washington University is a private, coeducational comprehensive university located in Washington, D.C. in the United States...

     - absorbed Mount Vernon College for Women, 1999; absorbed Benjamin Franklin University, 1987; absorbed National University, 1954
  • Gordon College (Massachusetts)
    Gordon College (Massachusetts)
    Gordon College is a liberal arts college located on the former Princemere estate in Wenham, Massachusetts, northeast of Beverly. Founded by Baptist minister A. J...

     - absorbed Barrington College
    Barrington College
    Barrington College was a four-year Christian liberal arts college located in Barrington, Rhode Island. It is no longer in operation.-History:...

     (1985)
  • Hamilton College - absorbed Kirkland College
    Kirkland College
    Kirkland College was a small, private liberal arts women's college located in Clinton, New York from 1968 to 1978. It was named for Samuel Kirkland, who founded Hamilton College...

    , 1978
  • Hannibal-LaGrange College (now Hannibal-LaGrange University) - merger of LaGrange College and Hannibal College, 1928
  • University of Hartford
    University of Hartford
    The University of Hartford is a private, independent, nonsectarian, coeducational university located in West Hartford, Connecticut. The degree programs at the University of Hartford hold the highest levels of accreditation available in the US, including the Engineering Accreditation Commission of...

     - merger of Hartford Art School, Hartt College of Music, and Hillyer College, 1957
  • Hendrix College
    Hendrix College
    Hendrix College is a private liberal arts college located in Conway, Arkansas. The student body averages around 1,400 and currently represents forty-three states and fourteen foreign countries. In US News and World Report's America's Best Colleges, Hendrix is ranked annually in the top tier of...

     - absorbed Henderson-Brown College, 1929; absorbed Galloway Women's College, 1933
  • University of Houston–Downtown
    University of Houston–Downtown
    The University of Houston–Downtown is a four-year state university, and is a distinct component institution of the University of Houston System. Its campus spans 20-acre in Downtown Houston, with a satellite location in northwestern Harris County...

     - assets were acquired from South Texas Junior College
    South Texas Junior College
    South Texas Junior College was a junior college located in Houston, Texas .In 1923 the college opened as a part of the South Texas School of Law and Commerce. Young Men's Christian Association and Harris County operated the two-year coeducational liberal arts school; no tax money supported the...

    , 1974
  • Houghton College
    Houghton College
    Houghton College is a Christian liberal arts college affiliated with the Wesleyan Church. The college is a member of both the Christian College Consortium and the Council for Christian Colleges and Universities...

     - absorbed United Wesleyan College, 1989
  • Illinois Institute of Technology
    Illinois Institute of Technology
    Illinois Institute of Technology, commonly called Illinois Tech or IIT, is a private Ph.D.-granting university located in Chicago, Illinois, with programs in engineering, science, psychology, architecture, business, communications, industrial technology, information technology, design, and law...

     - absorbed Midwest College of Engineering, 1991
  • Kansas State University
    Kansas State University
    Kansas State University, commonly shortened to K-State, is an institution of higher learning located in Manhattan, Kansas, in the United States...

     - absorbed Kansas College of Technology, 1991

L-M

  • University of Kentucky
    University of Kentucky
    The University of Kentucky, also known as UK, is a public co-educational university and is one of the state's two land-grant universities, located in Lexington, Kentucky...

     - absorbed the Louisville College of Pharmacy in 1947.
  • University of La Verne
    University of La Verne
    The University of La Verne is a private research university located in La Verne, California . Founded in 1891, the university is composed of the College of Arts & Sciences, College of Business & Public Management, College of Education and Organizational Leadership, College of Law, and a Regional...

     - absorbed San Fernando Valley College of Law, 1983
  • Lawson State Community College - absorbed Bessemer State Technical College, 2005.
  • Luther College
    Luther College (Iowa)
    Luther College is a four-year, residential liberal arts institution of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, located in Decorah, Iowa, USA...

     - absorbed Decorah College for Women, 1936
  • Loyola University Chicago
    Loyola University Chicago
    Loyola University Chicago is a private Jesuit research university located in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Founded by the Society of Jesus in 1870 under the title St...

     -- absorbed Mundelein College, Chicago, 1991
  • Loyola Marymount University
    Loyola Marymount University
    Loyola Marymount University is a comprehensive co-educational private Roman Catholic university in the Jesuit and Marymount traditions located in Los Angeles, California, United States...

     - merger of Marymount College and Loyola University, 1973
  • Loyola University Maryland - absorbed Mount Saint Agnes College
    Mount Saint Agnes College
    Mount Saint Agnes College was a Catholic women's college located in the Mount Washington neighborhood of Baltimore, Maryland. It opened in 1890 and was operated by the Sisters of Mercy....

    , 1971
  • Loyola University New Orleans
    Loyola University New Orleans
    Loyola University New Orleans is a private, co-educational and Jesuit university located in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. Originally established as Loyola College in 1904, the institution was chartered as a university in 1912. It bears the name of the Jesuit patron, Saint Ignatius of Loyola...

     - absorbed College of the Immaculate Conception, 1911; absorbed New Orleans College of Pharmacy, 1919
  • Mannes College of Music
    Mannes College of Music
    Mannes College The New School for Music is The New School university's music conservatory. While the university's main campus is located in Greenwich Village, New York City, Mannes maintains its main academic building on the Upper West Side of Manhattan....

     - absorbed Chatham Square Music School
  • Martin Luther College
    Martin Luther College
    This article deals with the WELS-affiliated tertiary institution in Minnesota. See Luther College for the ELCA institution in Iowa.Martin Luther College is the college of ministry operated by the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod...

     - merger of Dr. Martin Luther College and Northwestern College (Wisconsin), 1995
  • University of Maryland, Baltimore
    University of Maryland, Baltimore
    University of Maryland, Baltimore, was founded in 1807. It comprises some of the oldest professional schools in the nation and world. It is the original campus of the University System of Maryland. Located on 60 acres in downtown Baltimore, Maryland, it is part of the University System of Maryland...

     - absorbed Baltimore College
    Baltimore College
    Baltimore College was a college in the city of Baltimore, Maryland founded in 1804. It was a private non-sectarian institution, although the president of its board of directors when it was formed also happened to be the Roman Catholic bishop of Baltimore....

    , 1830
  • University of Massachusetts Boston
    University of Massachusetts Boston
    The University of Massachusetts Boston, also known as UMass Boston, is an urban public research university and the second largest campus in the five-campus University of Massachusetts system. The university is located on on Harbor Point in the City of Boston, Massachusetts, United States...

     – absorbed Boston State College
    Boston State College
    Boston State College was a public university located in Boston, Massachusetts, United States.It was located in the Longwood Medical Area in Boston. Boston State College's roots begin with the Girls High School, founded in 1852. In 1872, the Boston Normal School separated from Girls High School and...

    , 1982
  • University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
    University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
    The University of Massachusetts Dartmouth is one of five campuses and operating subdivisions of the University of Massachusetts . It is located in North Dartmouth, Massachusetts, United States, in the center of the South Coast region, between the cities of New Bedford to the east and Fall River...

     – merger of Bradford Durfee College of Technology
    Bradford Durfee College of Technology
    The Bradford Durfee College of Technology was a college located in Fall River, Massachusetts. It was chartered in 1895 as the Bradford Durfee Textile School. It was then incorporated in 1899 and opened in 1904.-Creation and beginnings:...

     and New Bedford Institute of Technology
    New Bedford Institute of Technology
    The New Bedford Institute of Technology was a public college located in New Bedford, Massachusetts, United States. It was founded in 1899 as the New Bedford Textile School.-History:...

    , 1964; absorbed Southern New England School of Law
    Southern New England School of Law
    Southern New England School of Law was a non-profit law school located in North Dartmouth, Massachusetts that operated from 1981 to 2010...

    , 2010
  • University of Massachusetts Lowell
    University of Massachusetts Lowell
    The University of Massachusetts Lowell is a public university in Lowell, Massachusetts, and part of the University of Massachusetts system...

     – merger of Lowell State College
    Lowell State College
    Lowell State College was a public college located in Lowell, Massachusetts, United States. It was founded in 1894 as the Lowell Normal School.-Early years:...

     and Lowell Technological Institute
    Lowell Technological Institute
    The Lowell Technological Institute was a public college located in Lowell, Massachusetts, United States. It was founded in 1895 as the Lowell Textile School.-Beginnings:...

    , 1975–76
  • Mercer University
    Mercer University
    Mercer University is an independent, private, coeducational university with a Baptist heritage located in the U.S. state of Georgia. Mercer is the only university of its size in the United States that offers programs in eleven diversified fields of study: liberal arts, business, education, music,...

     - absorbed Tift College
    Tift College
    Tift College was a private liberal arts women's college located in Forsyth, Georgia. Its campus was situated 20 miles outside of Macon. Tift College merged with Mercer University in 1986 and was closed by Mercer in 1987....

    , 1986
  • Miami University
    Miami University
    Miami University is a coeducational public research university located in Oxford, Ohio, United States. Founded in 1809, it is the 10th oldest public university in the United States and the second oldest university in Ohio, founded four years after Ohio University. In its 2012 edition, U.S...

     - absorbed Oxford College of Music and Art, 1928; absorbed Western College, 1974
  • Middlebury College
    Middlebury College
    Middlebury College is a private liberal arts college located in Middlebury, Vermont, USA. Founded in 1800, it is one of the oldest liberal arts colleges in the United States. Drawing 2,400 undergraduates from all 50 United States and over 70 countries, Middlebury offers 44 majors in the arts,...

     - affiliated then acquired the Monterey Institute of International Studies
    Monterey Institute of International Studies
    The Monterey Institute of International Studies is a graduate school of Middlebury College, located in Monterey, California, United States...

     (MIIS), now a graduate school, 2010
  • Millsaps College
    Millsaps College
    Millsaps College is a private liberal arts college located in Jackson, Mississippi. Founded in 1890, the college is recognized as one of the country's best private colleges dedicated to undergraduate teaching and educating the whole individual. Affiliated with the United Methodist Church, Millsaps...

     - absorbed Grenada College, 1950; absorbed Whitworth College, 1938
  • Morningside College
    Morningside College
    Morningside College is a private, liberal arts college affiliated with the United Methodist Church located in Sioux City, Iowa. Founded in 1894 by the Methodist Episcopal Church, Morningside College is a private, four-year, co-educational liberal arts institution. Morningside has 21 buildings on a ...

     - absorbed Charles City College, 1914

N through R

  • National College
    National College of Business & Technology
    National College, formerly National College of Business & Technology and also formerly National Business College, is a for-profit career college operating in the southeastern and east-central United States...

     - acquired Kentucky College of Business and absorbed Fugazzi College.
  • The New School
    The New School
    The New School is a university in New York City, located mostly in Greenwich Village. From its founding in 1919 by progressive New York academics, and for most of its history, the university was known as the New School for Social Research. Between 1997 and 2005 it was known as New School University...

     (then the New School for Social Research) - absorbed Parsons School of Design in 1970; absorbed Mannes College of Music in 1989.
  • New York University
    New York University
    New York University is a private, nonsectarian research university based in New York City. NYU's main campus is situated in the Greenwich Village section of Manhattan...

     - acquired New York College of Dentistry in 1925; acquired Mount Sinai School of Medicine
    Mount Sinai School of Medicine
    Mount Sinai School of Medicine is an American medical school in the borough of Manhattan in New York City, currently ranked among the top 20 medical schools in the United States. It was chartered by Mount Sinai Hospital in 1963....

     in 1999; acquired Polytechnic University of Brooklyn, 2008
  • Northeastern University
    Northeastern University, Boston
    Northeastern University , is a private, secular, coeducational research university in Boston, Massachusetts. Northeastern has eight colleges and offers undergraduate majors in 65 departments...

     - absorbed Bouve College, 1964
  • Nova Southeastern University
    Nova Southeastern University
    Nova Southeastern University, commonly referred to as NSU or Nova, is a private, coeducational, nonsectarian, research university located in Broward County, Florida, with its main campus in the town of Davie...

     - merger of Nova University and Southeastern University of the Health Sciences, 1994
  • Pace University
    Pace University
    Pace University is an American private, co-educational, and comprehensive multi-campus university in the New York metropolitan area with campuses in New York City and Westchester County, New York.-Programs:...

     - absorbed Briarcliff College
    Briarcliff College
    Briarcliff College was a women's college located in the village of Briarcliff Manor in Westchester County, New York, near White Plains.Founded in the 1904, Briarcliff was a junior college until 1965, during the presidency of Charles E. Atkins, when it began awarding four-year Bachelor's degrees...

    , 1977; merged with College of White Plains (formerly Good Counsel College), 1975
  • Pennsylvania State University
    Pennsylvania State University
    The Pennsylvania State University, commonly referred to as Penn State or PSU, is a public research university with campuses and facilities throughout the state of Pennsylvania, United States. Founded in 1855, the university has a threefold mission of teaching, research, and public service...

     - absorbed Dickinson School of Law
    Dickinson School of Law
    Penn State University Dickinson School of Law is the law school of The Pennsylvania State University...

    , 2000
  • Phillips Community College of the University of Arkansas
    Phillips Community College of the University of Arkansas
    Phillips Community College of the University of Arkansas is a two-year institution of higher learning located in Helena-West Helena, Arkansas. The college enrolls 2,350 students and has been accredited by The Higher Learning Commission of the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools the...

     - absorbed the Rice Belt Technical Institute, 1996
  • University of Portland
    University of Portland
    The University of Portland is a private Roman Catholic university located in Portland, Oregon. It is affiliated with the Congregation of Holy Cross and is the sister school of the University of Notre Dame. Founded in 1901, UP has a student body of about 3,600 students...

     - absorbed Multnomah College
    Multnomah College
    Multnomah College, originally established in 1897 as the Educational Department of the YMCA in downtown Portland, Oregon,was the oldest fully accredited two-year college in the U.S. Pacific Northwest at the time it was absorbed by the University of Portland in 1969...

    , 1969
  • Rich Mountain Community College
    Rich Mountain Community College
    Rich Mountain Community College is a public two-year institution of higher learning located in Mena, Arkansas. There are satellite campuses of the college located in Waldron, Wickes, Oden, and Mount Ida that serve Polk, Scott, and Montgomery counties. In 2008, Dr. Wayne Hatcher was appointed the...

     - formed by the merger of Rich Mountain Vocational-Technical School and the off-campus program of Henderson State University
    Henderson State University
    Henderson State University, founded in 1890 as Arkadelphia Methodist College, is a four-year public liberal arts university located in Arkadelphia, Arkansas, United States. It is Arkansas's only member of the Council of Public Liberal Arts Colleges...

    , 1983
  • Rutgers University
    Rutgers University
    Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey , is the largest institution for higher education in New Jersey, United States. It was originally chartered as Queen's College in 1766. It is the eighth-oldest college in the United States and one of the nine Colonial colleges founded before the American...

     - absorbed University of Newark, 1947

S through Z

  • College of St. Catherine
    College of St. Catherine
    St. Catherine University is a private Catholic university for women located in Saint Paul, Minnesota, United States. There is also a campus in Minneapolis. Enrollment is 5,246 students. With approximately 2,900 bachelor's students, it is the largest university for women in the United States. Its...

     - absorbed St. Mary's Junior College, 1986
  • University of San Diego
    University of San Diego
    The University of San Diego is a Roman Catholic university in San Diego, California. USD offers more than sixty bachelor's, master’s, and doctoral programs...

     - absorbed San Diego College for Women, 1972
  • South Arkansas Community College
    South Arkansas Community College
    South Arkansas Community College is a public two-year college in downtown El Dorado in Union County, Arkansas.-Historical summary:...

     - merger of Southern Arkansas University, El Dorado Branch and Oil Belt Technical College, 1992
  • Southern Benedictine College
    Southern Benedictine College
    Southern Benedictine College was a Catholic Benedictine college located in Cullman, Alabama, USA. Named Saint Bernard College closed in 1979.It was established as a junior college by the Benedictine Society of Alabama as Saint Bernard College in 1929, although it had been conferring Bachelor's...

     - merger of Saint's Bernard College and Cullman College, 1976
  • Southern Nazarene University
    Southern Nazarene University
    Southern Nazarene University is a Christian liberal arts college located in Bethany, Oklahoma, United States.-History:The history of the institution is one of various mergers and, therefore, one of differing institutions. While SNU claims its founding date as 1899, that founding date refers to an...

     - absorbed Peniel College
    Peniel College
    -History:Texas Holiness University was founded by B. A. Cordell and E. C. DeJernett in 1898. It was then established on a 37-acre campus in 1899 by A. M. Hills and a small holiness community at Holiness, later called Peniel and now part of Greenville, Texas...

     (1920), Central Nazarene College
    Central Nazarene College
    The Central Nazarene College was a junior college located in Hamlin, Texas. It closed in 1929.-History:The school opened as a grammar school, academy, and junior college in 1909 under the leadership of Reverend W. E. Fisher, superintendent of the Abilene and Hamlin districts of the Church of the...

     (1929), Arkansas Holiness College
    Arkansas Holiness College
    Arkansas Holiness College was an educational institution located in Vilonia, Arkansas. It has since closed.-History:A school for children was founded 1900 by Fannie Suddarth. It was thought to have a Free Methodist affiliation but became a part of the Eastern Council of the Holiness Church of...

     (1931), Bresee Theological College
    Bresee Theological College
    -History:Mattie Hoke founded Kansas Holiness Bible College in Hutchinson, Kansas 1905. It was first supported by a local holiness congregation called Apostolic holiness Church, then later by the Kansas and Nebraska District Churches of the Nazarene under the name of Bresee Theological College. In...

     (1940)
  • St. John's University (New York City)
    St. John's University (New York City)
    St. John's University is a private, Roman Catholic, coeducational university located in New York City, United States. Founded by the Congregation of the Mission in 1870, the school was originally located in the borough of Brooklyn in the neighborhood of Bedford–Stuyvesant...

     College of Business - absorbed the College of Insurance
    College of Insurance
    The College of Insurance was a specialized accredited college, started by insurance industry leaders in 1901 as an insurance library society, the Insurance Society of New York . The Insurance Society of New York initially provided study space and material to young people entering the insurance...

     - 2001
  • Southwestern University
    Southwestern University
    Southwestern University is a private, four-year, undergraduate, liberal arts college located in Georgetown, Texas, USA. Founded in 1840, Southwestern is the oldest university in Texas. The school is affiliated with the United Methodist Church although the curriculum is nonsectarian...

     - merger of Rutersville College
    Rutersville College
    Rutersville College , was a coeducational college located in the unincorporated community of Rutersville in Fayette County, Texas, United States. Chartered under the Republic of Texas in 1840, Rutersville College was Texas's first institution of higher education...

    , Wesleyan College, McKenzie College, and Soule University
    Soule University
    Soule University was a private Methodist university in Chappell Hill, a rural community in Washington County, Texas, United States. Chartered in 1856, Soule replaced the male department of Chappell Hill Male and Female Institute and was intended to succeed the failed Rutersville College...

    , 1873
  • University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
    University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
    The University of Tennessee at Chattanooga is a public university located in Chattanooga, Tennessee. The University, often referred to as UTC or simply "Chattanooga" , is one of three universities and two other affiliated institutions in the University of Tennessee System; the others being in...

     - merger of the University of Chattanooga, University of Tennessee, and Chattanooga City College, 1969
  • Tennessee State University
    Tennessee State University
    Tennessee State University is a land-grant university located in Nashville, Tennessee. TSU is the only state-funded historically black university in Tennessee.-History:...

     - absorbed University of Tennessee at Nashville
    University of Tennessee at Nashville
    The University of Tennessee at Nashville was a branch campus of the UT system which existed from 1968 to 1979. It grew out of an adult education extension program which the University had operated in Nashville since 1947, and UTN remained focused on evening adult education throughout its life. ...

    , 1979
  • University of Toledo
    University of Toledo
    The University of Toledo is a public university in Toledo, Ohio, United States. The Carnegie Foundation classified the university as "Doctoral/Research Extensive."-National recognition:...

     - merger with Medical University of Ohio
    Medical University of Ohio
    The University of Toledo Medical Center is a teaching hospital affiliated with the University of Toledo, a public university located in Toledo, Ohio, United States...

    , 2006
  • Transylvania University
    Transylvania University
    Transylvania University is a private, undergraduate liberal arts college in Lexington, Kentucky, United States, affiliated with the Christian Church . The school was founded in 1780. It offers 38 majors, and pre-professional degrees in engineering and accounting...

    • Merged with Kentucky University, 1865, adopting the latter school's name (Transylvania name restored in 1908)
    • Absorbed Hamilton College (Kentucky)
      Hamilton College (Kentucky)
      Hamilton College was a private women's college in Lexington, Kentucky, that closed in 1932.Hamilton was founded by banker James M. Hocker in 1869 as the Hocker Female College. In 1878, a donation by William Hamilton changed the name of the school to Hamilton College...

      , 1903
  • Trenholm State Technical College - Formed by a merger between H. Councill Treholm State Technical College and John M. Patterson State Technical College, 2002/2003.
  • Trinity University (Texas)
    Trinity University (Texas)
    Trinity University is a private, independent, primarily undergraduate, university in San Antonio, Texas. Its campus is located in the Monte Vista Historic District and adjacent to Brackenridge Park....

     - absorbed University of San Antonio, 1942
  • Union College (Kentucky)
    Union College (Kentucky)
    Union College is a four-year private college located in Barbourville, Kentucky. The college, founded in 1879, is affiliated with the United Methodist Church. Union College is a small liberal arts college in the Appalachian Mountains...

     – absorbed Sue Bennett College, 1997
  • Vanderbilt University
    Vanderbilt University
    Vanderbilt University is a private research university located in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Founded in 1873, the university is named for shipping and rail magnate "Commodore" Cornelius Vanderbilt, who provided Vanderbilt its initial $1 million endowment despite having never been to the...

     - absorbed Peabody College
    Peabody College
    Peabody College of Education and Human Development was founded in 1875 when the University of Nashville, located in Nashville, Tennessee, split into two separate educational institutions...

    , 1979
  • Virginia Commonwealth University
    Virginia Commonwealth University
    Virginia Commonwealth University is a public university located in Richmond, Virginia. It comprises two campuses in the Downtown Richmond area, the product of a merger between the Richmond Professional Institute and the Medical College of Virginia in 1968...

     - merger of Richmond Professional Institute and Medical College of Virginia
  • Virginia Union University
    Virginia Union University
    Virginia Union University is a historically black university located in Richmond, Virginia, United States. It took its present name in 1899 upon the merger of two older schools, Richmond Theological Institute and Wayland Seminary, each founded after the end of American Civil War by the American...

     - absorbed Hartshorn Memorial College, 1932
  • Washington & Jefferson College
    Washington & Jefferson College
    Washington & Jefferson College, also known as W & J College or W&J, is a private liberal arts college in Washington, Pennsylvania, in the United States, which is south of Pittsburgh...

     - merger of Washington College in Washington, Pennsylvania
    Washington, Pennsylvania
    Washington is a city in and the county seat of Washington County, Pennsylvania, United States, within the Pittsburgh Metro Area in the southwestern part of the state...

     and Jefferson College in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania
    Canonsburg, Pennsylvania
    Canonsburg is a borough in Washington County, Pennsylvania, southwest of Pittsburgh. Canonsburg was laid out by Colonel John Canon in 1789 and incorporated in 1802....

    , 1865
  • Wayne University (now Wayne State University) - formed by the merger of Detroit City College, Detroit Teachers College and Detroit Medical College.
  • University of West Los Angeles - absorbed the San Fernando Valley College of Law in 2002
  • Xavier University
    Xavier University (Cincinnati)
    Xavier University is a co-educational Jesuit university in the United States located in Cincinnati, Ohio. The University is the sixth-oldest Catholic university in the nation and has an undergraduate enrollment of about 4,000 students and graduate enrollment of 2,600 students. Xavier is primarily...

     (Cincinnati) - absorbed Edgecliff College
    Edgecliff College
    Edgecliff College was a private Catholic women's college located in Cincinnati, Ohio. It was founded in 1935 and merged with Xavier University, also of Cincinnati, in 1980.-History:...

     in 1980

See also

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