Parsons College — The Boom School That Sold Second Chances Until the Accreditors Closed the Window
Summary
Parsons College, a private college in Fairfield, Iowa, founded in 1875 on a Presbyterian bequest, closed in bankruptcy on June 1, 1973, after ninety-eight years — but the institution that died in 1973 had already been killed, in every way that mattered, six years earlier. In the spring of 1967 the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools stripped Parsons of the accreditation that gives a degree its meaning, and from that day the college was a dead institution still drawing breath. The real story is not the 1973 closure but how a sleepy, near-empty prairie college became, for one decade, the most notorious experiment in American higher education — and what happened when the experiment's central bargain came due.
The experiment had a name and an author. In 1955 the trustees handed a 357-student college to Millard G. Roberts, a Presbyterian minister from New York with a genius for promotion and no patience for the conventional. Roberts built what came to be called the Parsons Plan: a year-round trimester, a tutorial system staffed by doctorate-holding professors lured from better schools with some of the highest salaries in the country, and — the engine of the whole machine — an open door to students who had flunked out of, or been rejected by, everywhere else. The school of second chances drew those students by the thousands, paying full freight; enrollment exploded from 357 to roughly 5,000 by 1966. The model was a money pump, and the money built dormitories almost overnight.
It also built debt at a rate the college could not survive. The expansion ran on borrowing — by the mid-1960s the debt was climbing on the order of $100,000 a month — and the academic substance underneath the marketing was thin enough that the accreditors lost patience. A scathing 1966 Life magazine treatment, "The Wizard of Flunk-Out U.," made Parsons a national punchline; in April 1967 North Central revoked accreditation, the board forced Roberts out, and the college was left with roughly $14 million in debt and a name that had become a synonym for academic hucksterism.
Accreditation came back in 1970, but the customers did not. A college whose entire value proposition was a credential could not sell that credential once the market had watched it evaporate and return; enrollment that had touched 5,000 fell toward 1,500 and kept falling. Parsons ran out of cash in May 1973, a federal bankruptcy judge found it irretrievably insolvent, and the doors closed with roughly 925 students still enrolled. The campus stood empty for two years until 1975, when it was bought to house Maharishi International University. The lasting lesson is not subtle: an institution that treats its most vulnerable students as a revenue stream, and its accreditation as an inconvenience, can grow very fast and die just as fast — and the students are the ones left holding a degree from a college that no longer exists.
Timeline
The Prairie College Nobody Noticed
For its first eighty years Parsons was the kind of institution American higher education is quietly full of and rarely thinks about: a small, denominationally founded liberal-arts college on the edge of a farm town, doing modest work for modest numbers. Lewis B. Parsons, a New York merchant who had bought Iowa prairie land in the 1850s, left his estate to fund "an institution of learning in the State of Iowa" under Presbyterian supervision; the trustees opened the doors in 1875 with thirty-four students and three Presbyterian ministers for a faculty. A fire destroyed the records in 1902; an Andrew Carnegie gift built a library in 1907; the college lost and regained accreditation around 1950. None of it made news beyond Jefferson County. By 1955 Parsons had 357 students and the gentle, terminal quiet of a college that had never quite found a reason to be large.
What it found instead was a salesman. Millard Roberts came to Fairfield in 1955 with a minister's certainty and an entrepreneur's eye for an underused asset: a fully built college sitting nearly empty in a country about to be flooded with young people who wanted a degree and could not get into the schools that already had one. The conventional college turned those students away. Roberts decided to sell to them — a brilliant reading of the market, and the market paid him to be right for a decade.
This was Parsons' golden age, such as it was, and it deserves to be seen for what it genuinely accomplished before judging what it became. Roberts did not merely warehouse the rejected; he spent real money trying to teach them, raiding better universities for faculty and paying salaries that by 1966 ranked among the highest in the nation, so that a student who had flunked out of a state school might find himself in a small tutorial led by a genuine PhD. The trimester ran the campus year-round; new dormitories rose almost overnight; a summer fine-arts festival brought culture to the prairie. For a certain kind of late-blooming or badly-counseled eighteen-year-old, Parsons in 1963 really was a second chance. The tragedy is that the same machine that gave them the chance was, structurally, a confidence trick with a deadline.
The Wizard and the Window
The trick was this. Parsons sold a credential — a regionally accredited bachelor's degree — to students who could not buy one elsewhere, and financed the selling with debt secured against the assumption that the students would keep coming. Both halves depended on a single fragile thing: the accreditation that made the degree worth buying. But the academic standards that justified the seal were exactly what Roberts had relaxed to fill the seats, and an accreditor exists precisely to notice that contradiction. North Central put Parsons on probation in 1963 and watched the debt climb at roughly $100,000 a month while the marketing got louder and the substance did not catch up. The window through which Parsons sold its degrees was closing, and the man at the center could not stop talking long enough to hear it shut.
Then Life magazine arrived. The June 1966 profile, "The Wizard of Flunk-Out U.," turned a regional embarrassment into a national one, painting Roberts as a carnival barker who had built a diploma mill on the prairie. Fairfield, whose economy now ran on the college, rallied with a "Fairfield Fights Back" campaign, but the damage was structural. On April 6, 1967, North Central revoked accreditation effective June 30, citing administrative weakness and what it bluntly called a credibility gap; the board, which had just given Roberts a fresh five-year contract, forced his resignation that June. He left behind a college of nearly 5,000 students, roughly $14 million in debt, and a degree that — for any student not yet finished — was about to be worth a great deal less than they had paid for it.
It is fair to be dry about the architect, because the hubris was self-inflicted: Roberts built a machine that converted other institutions' rejects into his own dormitory bonds, bet the accreditors would never call it, and lost the bet in the most public way available in 1966. But the dryness must stop at the man. The students were not in on the scheme; they had been told, in good faith as far as they knew, that they were buying a real degree from a real college — many of them precisely because no one else would sell them one. When the accreditation fell, it fell on them.
A Credential That Could Not Be Resold
What killed Parsons in the end was not the loss of accreditation but the impossibility of un-losing it in the marketplace. The college won North Central's seal back in the spring of 1970, a genuine achievement that ought to have been a resurrection. It was not. A degree's value is its reputation, and Parsons' reputation had been incinerated in a national magazine and a public defrocking; a prospective student in 1971 had watched this college's credential evaporate and crawl back, and reasonably declined to gamble three more years on whether it would survive. Enrollment that had touched 5,000 sank toward 1,500 and kept going, and the money pump ran in reverse: fewer students meant less tuition, less tuition meant default risk on the building debt, and the debt did not shrink to match the shrinking college.
The arithmetic closed the way arithmetic does. Parsons ran out of cash in May 1973; a federal bankruptcy court reached the only available conclusion — the institution was irretrievably insolvent — and on June 1, 1973, the college shut its doors after ninety-eight years, with roughly 925 students still enrolled and suddenly stranded. The campus, dozens of buildings raised in the boom, stood vacant and overgrown for two years. In 1975 it was bought to house Maharishi International University, founded on transcendental meditation, which over time razed much of what the boom had built. Parsons' own alumni, reuniting decades later, would find few of their buildings still standing — a college erased twice, first as a name and then as a place.
The Five Factors
Aftermath
The roughly 925 students enrolled at the 1973 collapse faced the hardest version of a closing-college fate: no orderly teach-out, only a bankruptcy, and they scattered to transfer where they could, carrying credits from a college just declared insolvent. The faculty Roberts had so expensively assembled lost their positions in a glutted academic market, and Fairfield lost the employer that had become the center of its economy — the town that once rallied to "fight back" now left with an empty campus on its northern edge.
The real estate found a second life that erased the first, passing in 1975 to Maharishi International University (later Maharishi University of Management), which in time demolished much of the boom-era construction and let Parsons' physical traces disappear. The college's most durable legacy is verbal: "Flunk-Out U." entered the language as shorthand for the diploma-mill temptation, the case study that every account of academic over-expansion and accreditation risk eventually cites. Parsons proved that an American college can grow tenfold in a decade — and that the same forces that make such growth possible can make the fall total, leaving behind a name that survives mainly as a warning.
Lessons
- Treat accreditation as the foundation, not the formality: if your institution's value rests on a credential, never trade the standards behind that credential for short-term enrollment, because you are mortgaging the only thing you sell.
- Do not finance growth on the assumption it is permanent; debt sized to a boom becomes a noose in a downturn, so match fixed obligations to a conservative, not an optimistic, enrollment line.
- Guard reputation as a balance-sheet asset, because trust collapses faster than it rebuilds and a burned name can outlast even a restored accreditation.
- Refuse any business model that turns the most vulnerable students into the revenue stream; when it fails, it fails on them, and that is both a moral and an institutional liability.
- Build governance that can overrule a charismatic founder, because an institution with no independent brake will ride its founder's blind spot all the way to insolvency.
References
- Parsons College Wikipedia
- The Rise and Fall of Parsons College IAGenWeb (Jefferson County)
- Alumni of 'Flunk-Out U' reunite 30 years after school's demise Lawrence Journal-World (AP)
- Parsons College – Lost in Time, Not Forgotten by Alumni KILJ Radio