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SG-064 Catholic women's college · New Hampshire 1978

Mount St. Mary College (New Hampshire) — A Marble Mansion of a Women’s College, Emptied by Coeducation

Lifespan
1934–1978 · 44 yrs
Peak Enrollment
~500 students
Killed By
enrollment + finances
Fate
Closed
LocationHooksett, NH
AffiliationCatholic women's college (Sisters of Mercy)
Campus todaySNHU North Campus land; Mercy Hall now luxury apartments

Summary

Mount St. Mary College, on a wooded ridge in Hooksett, New Hampshire, just north of Manchester, founded in 1934 by the Sisters of Mercy as a Catholic college for women, graduated its final class in May 1978 and then closed for good. It had lasted forty-four years. It did not fail from scandal, debt concealed in the books, or a creditor at the gate. It failed from the quietest cause in the catalogue of small-college death: it was a single-sex college for women in a decade when young women had stopped choosing single-sex colleges, and the enrollment that had once filled its marble halls drained away until the arithmetic no longer closed.

What the Sisters of Mercy had built was, by the standards of small Catholic colleges, unusually handsome. The campus spread across roughly 550 acres about sixty miles northwest of Boston, and it was dominated by Mercy Hall — a five-level former mansion of white Italian marble with mahogany and oak interiors, purchased from the prominent Galt family in 1909 and pressed into service as the college's academic and administrative heart. For decades the Mount turned out teachers, nurses, dietitians, and degree-holders in biology, business, languages, and social welfare, mostly Catholic women from New Hampshire and New England, and it kept close company with the all-male Saint Anselm College down the road, the two institutions sharing the social and academic life that single-sex colleges of the era arranged between them.

The decline was demographic before it was financial. Through the late 1960s and into the 1970s, American women abandoned women's colleges en masse as the elite men's institutions went coeducational and the public universities welcomed them on equal terms; a degree from a small Catholic women's college began to look, to an eighteen-year-old, like a narrowing rather than a choice. Mount St. Mary's enrollment slid from a high of roughly 500 students to just under 200 by the time it closed — and a residential campus of 550 acres cannot be carried by 200 tuitions. The financial difficulty that finished the college was the symptom; the empty seats were the disease.

What was lost was modest in scale and real in kind: a forty-four-year-old women's college, a faculty of religious and lay teachers, and the particular thing a women's college had been built to be. The buildings survived their institution. The land was sold in 1981 to New Hampshire College — today Southern New Hampshire University — to serve as a North Campus, and later passed to private investors; Mercy Hall is now a luxury apartment complex, and the McAuley Library that once served the college now serves the town of Hooksett as its public library. The mansion outlived the college that filled it.

Timeline

1909
The mansion
The Sisters of Mercy purchase a five-level marble-and-mahogany mansion from the Galt family in Hooksett, the building that will become Mercy Hall.
June 4, 1934
Chartered
A bill petitioned by Bishop John Peterson passes the New Hampshire legislature; Mount St. Mary College is established as a Catholic college for women.
Sept. 1934
Classes begin
The college opens that fall under the Sisters of Mercy, offering degrees in arts, sciences, and education.
1938
A long presidency
Sister M. De La Salle Coffey becomes president and serves through 1950, steadying the young college's first decades.
1940s–1960s
The golden years
The Mount grows toward a peak of roughly 500 women, builds out programs in nursing, dietetics, education, and the liberal arts, and keeps close ties with the all-male Saint Anselm College nearby.
Late 1960s
The tide turns
The national flight from single-sex education begins as men's colleges go coeducational and public universities expand; applications to women's colleges fall everywhere.
Early–mid 1970s
The slide
Enrollment drifts downward from its ~500 high toward roughly 200; with a 550-acre residential campus to carry, the falling head count becomes a financial crisis.
May 1978
The last class
After 44 years of educating young women, Mount St. Mary graduates its final class and ceases operations.
1981
The land sold
New Hampshire College — now Southern New Hampshire University — purchases the property to serve as its North Campus.
Later
A second life for the buildings
The campus passes to private investors; Mercy Hall becomes a luxury apartment complex, and McAuley Library becomes the public library of Hooksett.
2007
The alumnae adopted
Mount St. Mary alumnae are folded into Saint Anselm College's alumni network as associate members, preserving a record of the closed college.
2012
A scholarship endures
Alumnae establish an endowed scholarship at Saint Anselm honoring the college's heritage and founder Catherine McAuley's values.

A Mansion Becomes a College

The Mount began with a building before it began with a charter. In 1909 the Sisters of Mercy — the order Catherine McAuley had founded in Dublin to educate and serve women — acquired a striking mansion in Hooksett from the Galt family, a five-story pile of white Italian marble with mahogany and oak interiors, the kind of house a nineteenth-century fortune built and a twentieth-century family could no longer keep. For a quarter century it served the Sisters' purposes as an academy. Then, in 1934, with a bill petitioned through the New Hampshire legislature by Bishop John Peterson and passed on the fourth of June, the property became the seat of a degree-granting college for Catholic women, and that September the first students arrived to study arts, sciences, and education under the Sisters' instruction.

For the next three decades Mount St. Mary did what its kind did well, and at a scale that felt comfortable rather than ambitious. Under a long early presidency — Sister M. De La Salle Coffey held the office from 1938 to 1950 — the college settled into its identity: a women's college of a few hundred students on a sprawling, beautiful campus, turning out schoolteachers and nurses, dietitians and biologists, business and language graduates, for the parishes, schools, and hospitals of New Hampshire and New England. It enjoyed the social architecture of the single-sex era, pairing with the all-male Saint Anselm College a short distance away for the dances, lectures, and joint activities that two such institutions arranged. By its golden years the Mount counted roughly 500 women on its rolls. It was never large. It did not need to be. Its enrollment matched its mission, and the mission — the higher education of Catholic women, in a setting of unusual grace — needed no defense.

When Women Stopped Choosing Women's Colleges

The threat that closed Mount St. Mary did not come from inside the institution. It came from a change in what eighteen-year-old American women wanted, and it came fast. Through the late 1960s and into the 1970s, the elite men's colleges opened their doors to women, the public universities expanded and recruited them, and the entire category of the single-sex women's college began to empty. To a young woman weighing her options, a small Catholic women's college no longer read as a distinctive choice; it read as a limitation — fewer programs, fewer men, a narrower world than the coeducational campus down the highway offered at a public price. The colleges that had been built to give women an education they could not get elsewhere found that they could now get it everywhere, and on terms the women's colleges could not match.

For Mount St. Mary the consequence arrived as a falling number. Enrollment slid from its high of about 500 toward just under 200 by the end — a contraction of roughly sixty percent in the head count that paid the bills. A 550-acre residential campus, with its marble mansion and its library and its convent, is an expensive thing to heat, staff, and maintain, and it cannot be carried on 200 tuitions any more than a 500-seat hall can be funded by a quarter-full house. The financial difficulty that the college's own record names as the cause of closure was, in truth, downstream of the empty seats. There was no endowment deep enough to bridge a decade of demographic flight, no benefactor to underwrite a college the market had stopped demanding, and no version of a small women's college, in that decade, that the Sisters could have priced into solvency. The institution was healthy in every respect but the one that mattered: it no longer had enough students.

The Last Commencement and the Mansion's Afterlife

The end, when it came in May 1978, was an orderly close rather than a sudden collapse — a final commencement after forty-four years, the last class of Mount St. Mary women sent out before the college ceased operations. There was no creditor war, no fraud inquiry, no lawsuit; the Sisters of Mercy simply concluded a college they could no longer fill, and the students who remained finished or moved on. What followed was the slow, undramatic repurposing of a beautiful campus that had outlived its institution. In 1981, three years after the doors closed, New Hampshire College — the Manchester institution that would grow into the online giant Southern New Hampshire University — bought the property to serve as its North Campus, and the academic buildings the Sisters had filled with women found new students for a time.

Eventually the campus passed to private investors, and the marble mansion that had been the college's heart became something it had never been: a place to live. Mercy Hall is now a luxury apartment complex, fittingly renamed the Mount Saint Mary Apartments; the convent has reverted to a private residence; and McAuley Library — named for the order's founder — serves the town of Hooksett as its public library, lending books to a community rather than a college. The alumnae of Mount St. Mary, their college gone, were adopted in 2007 into the alumni network of Saint Anselm, the neighbor with whom they had shared their youth, and in 2012 they endowed a scholarship there in their college's name. It is the way many small women's colleges end: not in disgrace, but in demography, leaving behind handsome buildings, a diaspora of graduates, and a name kept alive by the people it educated.

The Five Factors

01
The collapse of the women's-college market was an external, sector-wide force
Mount St. Mary did nothing to lose its students; the students simply stopped existing as a category. When the men's colleges and public universities opened to women in the late 1960s and 1970s, the distinctive product of the single-sex women's college lost its reason to exist, and dozens of such colleges across the country emptied at once. No internal reform could have manufactured demand the culture had withdrawn.
02
A small single-sex college had no second market to fall back on
Larger or coeducational institutions facing falling enrollment could recruit a new population — men, commuters, graduate students, adult learners. A women's college of a few hundred had only women to recruit, in precisely the years women were choosing elsewhere, and converting to coeducation would have meant becoming an entirely different institution competing against far larger schools already established in that market.
03
A beautiful, sprawling campus is a heavy fixed cost
The 550 acres and the marble mansion that made Mount St. Mary distinctive also made it expensive: a residential campus must be heated, maintained, insured, and staffed whether it holds 500 students or 200. When the head count fell by more than half, the fixed costs did not, and the gap between them is where the college died.
04
Tuition dependence without an endowment cushion left no margin for a demographic decade
Like most small Catholic colleges, the Mount lived on tuition and the labor of its Sisters, not on investment income. A college with a deep endowment can subsidize itself through a bad enrollment cycle; a tuition-dependent one cannot, and a sixty-percent decline in paying students is not a cycle but a verdict.
05
An orderly close preserved dignity but not the institution
The Sisters of Mercy ended Mount St. Mary cleanly — a final commencement, no debt scandal, the buildings sold to other educational use before becoming homes. That orderly exit spared the students the chaos of an abrupt mid-year shutdown, but it did not save the college. The distinction worth drawing is between a graceful ending and a survival; the Mount achieved the first, which is the most a college in its position usually can.

Aftermath

The students of Mount St. Mary's final years were not stranded; the college closed on a graduation rather than a locked gate, and its last cohort finished or transferred without the wreckage an abrupt mid-semester shutdown inflicts. The faculty — Sisters of Mercy and lay instructors alike — and the staff lost the college that had employed them, in a quiet dispersal that drew no headlines beyond New Hampshire. The deepest loss was institutional: the disappearance of one more women's college from a country rapidly ceasing to have them, and with it a tradition the Sisters had carried from Dublin to a marble mansion on a New Hampshire ridge.

The campus fared better than the college. New Hampshire College's purchase of the land in 1981 gave the buildings a second academic life as a North Campus before the property passed to private investors, who converted Mercy Hall into apartments, returned the convent to private use, and left McAuley Library to the town. The alumnae kept the memory, adopted into Saint Anselm's rolls in 2007 and endowing a scholarship in their college's name in 2012. It is the gentlest version of a closure — no villain, no fraud, no stranded class — and also one of the most final, because nothing about it could have been reversed.

Lessons

  1. Watch the market a single-sex college serves, not just its own balance sheet: when the culture stops demanding the category, no amount of internal excellence will refill the seats, and the decline will be sector-wide rather than fixable in-house.
  2. Build a fixed-cost base the institution can carry at its likely low point, not its peak; a beautiful, sprawling residential campus becomes a liability the moment enrollment falls and the heating, staffing, and maintenance bills do not.
  3. A tuition-dependent college with a thin endowment has no buffer against a demographic decade — secure an endowment cushion in good years, because a sixty-percent enrollment decline is a verdict that arrives faster than any rescue.
  4. Choose the orderly close over the abrupt one when the end is unavoidable: a final commencement strands no one, preserves the institution's dignity, and gives the buildings a chance at a useful second life that a chaotic shutdown forecloses.
  5. Plan for the afterlife of the place and the people: arrange the campus's reuse, fold the alumni into a surviving institution, and let the graduates carry the name forward, because a college's memory can outlast its operations if someone is charged with keeping it.

References