Organization:Albertus Magnus College

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Albertus Magnus College
AlbertusMagnusCollgeSeal.jpg
Latin: Collegium Alberti Magni
TypePrivate liberal arts college
Established1925
AffiliationRoman Catholic
(Dominican Sisters of Peace)
PresidentMarc M. Camille, Ed.D.
Undergraduates1,200 full-time
Postgraduates270 full-time
Location
New Haven
,
CT
,
Campus50 acres (200,000 m2)
|u}}rsBlue and White          
AthleticsNCAA Division III – GNAC, ECAC
NicknameFalcons
AffiliationsACCU
CIC
NAICU
Websitealbertus.edu

Albertus Magnus College is a Catholic private liberal arts college in New Haven, Connecticut, United States . Founded by the Dominican Sisters of St. Mary of the Springs (now Dominican Sisters of Peace), it is located in the Prospect Hill neighborhood of New Haven, near the border with Hamden.

History

St. Albertus Magnus, namesake of the college, was a medieval scholar and philosopher

Albertus Magnus College was founded in 1925 by the Dominican Sisters of St. Mary of the Springs. The dedication speaker was James Rowland Angell, the president of nearby Yale University. All classes and offices were first housed in Rosary Hall, a Palladian-style mansion that has since been converted for use as the institution's main library. The college's first chaplain, Rev. Arthur Chandler, stated that the college's initial goal was to educate women "to become thinkers and leaders and the noble among the ladyhood of the future."[1]

By 1940 the campus had expanded to its current 50 acre size and absorbed a variety of surrounding gilded-era mansions for use as dormitories and office space. The school became known for its strict liberal arts curriculum that required four years of Latin or Greek study.

Originally a women's college, the institution became coeducational in 1985 to some controversy. The 1980s also brought a series of construction projects to the campus, including new classroom space and a new athletic center. The first graduate program, a Master of Arts in Liberal Studies, was offered in 1992.

Organization

Rosary Hall, the college's first building, currently houses the central library
Albertus Magnus College, view from the back of Rosary Hall.

Albertus Magnus is presided over by a board of trustees. A 1969 reorganization of this leadership opened 80% of spots to secular personnel while continuing to reserve 20% for members of the Dominican Sisters of Peace.

Academics

In addition to undergraduate majors, minors and concentrations, including pre-professional preparation, there are graduate programs in art therapy, mental health counseling, addiction counseling, leadership, liberal studies, fine arts in creative writing, human services, business administration, education, and management and organizational leadership.

As of 2014, the university has a 71.1% acceptance rate with a student body that is 35% male and 65% female.[2]

Campus

Sansbury Hall, an undergraduate residence hall

The main campus is located about two miles (3 km) from the central campus of Yale University in a residential area known as Prospect Hill near the border with Hamden. The neighborhood is on Prospect Street just above Edgerton Park and near East Rock.

The college uses several of the area's historic 19th century mansions as residence halls and administrative buildings. A number of these are contributing properties of the Prospect Hill Historic District.

Athletics

Albertus Magnus College teams participate as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association's Division III. The Falcons are a member of the Great Northeast Athletic Conference (GNAC). Men's sports include baseball, basketball, cross country, lacrosse, soccer, tennis and volleyball; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, lacrosse, soccer, softball, tennis and volleyball.

Notable people

Alumni

  • Ellen Bree Burns, U.S. Federal Judge[3]
  • Margaret Heckler, Member of the U.S. House of Representatives, Massachusetts (1967-1983), 15th United States Secretary of Health and Human Services, 19th United States Ambassador to Ireland[4]
  • Jacqueline Noonan, pediatric cardiologist, Noonan syndrome, hypoplastic left heart syndrome[5]

Faculty

  • Lawrence J. DeNardis, U.S. Congressman and University of New Haven president
  • Marcella Boveri, biologist
  • Alice Mattison, novelist and short story writer
  • Dorothea Rudnick, biologist

References

External links

[ ⚑ ] 41°19′57″N 72°55′26″W / 41.332418°N 72.923909°W / 41.332418; -72.923909