The idea for The College of Saint Rose was conceived by Joseph A. Delaney, the
vicar general of the
Roman Catholic Diocese of Albany, in 1920. Delaney contacted Blanche Rooney, a member of the local chapter of the
Sisters of Saint Joseph of Carondelet in the Provincial House on Eighth Street in
Troy, New York. Rooney and her sisters were receptive to the idea and, with the permission and support of
Bishop of Albany Edmund F. Gibbons and Rooney, Delaney purchased the William Keeler estate at 979 Madison Avenue. The College of Saint Rose was established as a Catholic college for women with a liberal arts curriculum in
Albany, New York when it received a provisional charter from the
Board of Regents on June 28, 1920. In the fall semester of 1920, the college opened for classes. At that time, the Albany-focused
Times Union stated that the sweeping lawns, a grove of pines, and a tennis court, make the site an ideal one for its new purpose. The Sisters of St. Joseph were responsible for the college; Rosina was named its first dean, while
Edmund Gibbons was named its honorary president. The college's founders selected its name to honor the first canonized saint in the Americas,
Saint Rose of Lima. Initially, emphasis was placed on the professional training of teachers, but it quickly expanded to include preparation for business and other professions. The college created an evening division in 1946 to serve World War II veterans. By 1950, the college opened a graduate school. Campus housing was made available to male students in the 1970s. Between 2008 and 2015, enrollment at the college decreased by 16 percent. Two months later, the faculty of the college passed a "no confidence" motion in regard to college president
Carolyn J. Stefanco. Also in 2016, the college announced its largest-ever incoming class of 658 students. Stefanco left her post as president in 2020. That same year, the college made $8 million in administrative budget cuts to address a COVID pandemic-related budget gap. In June 2023, the college's
accreditor, the
Middle States Commission on Higher Education, warned the college that its accreditation was "in jeopardy" due to financial difficulties. The commission gave the college six months to address the commission's concerns. By October, Fitch Ratings assessed the school's
bond rating as "BB", which is described as "non-investment grade speculative". In November, the college asked state lawmakers for emergency funding to avoid a closure.
Closure On November 30, 2023, the board of trustees voted to close the College of Saint Rose following the end of the spring semester 2024. College president
Marcia White stated that various challenges were affecting many small independent institutions of higher education, particularly in the
Northeastern United States; according to White, those challenges included years of declining enrollment and the
impact of the COVID-19 pandemic. Students protested the planned closure. The college held its final commencement ceremony on May 11, 2024. On October 10, 2024, the college filed for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. On March 13, 2025, the college's campus was sold to the Pine Hills Land Authority, a quasi-public entity created by
Albany County, for $35 million. The former president's house was sold separately for $625,000. In 2026, the Albany County, which plans to redevelop the campus, asked for proposals to purchase the college's library collection, which included antique Bibles and publications from the 1600s.
Presidents •
Edmund Gibbons (1920–1949) • Rose of Lima Dolan (1949–1953) •
Marcia White (2020–2024) ==Campus==