The
Eastern Collegiate Football Conference was formed in the spring of 2009 as an
NCAA Division III single-sport football conference. The conference, named after the geographic location of the institutions, began competition in the fall of 2009. Founding members were
Anna Maria College,
Becker College,
Castleton State College (now Vermont State University–Castleton),
Gallaudet University,
Husson University,
SUNY Maritime,
Mount Ida College, and
Norwich University. Norwich was the league's first champion, posting a perfect 6–0 conference record and defeating Mt. Ida in the season-ending ECFC Championship Game. In 2010, SUNY Maritime earned the ECFC's first bid to the
NCAA Division III Playoffs after a perfect 10–0 regular season record. SUNY Maritime would go on to lose 60–0 to
Alfred University in the first round of the NCAA playoffs.
2015 realignment In April 2015, charter member Norwich announced it would be leaving the ECFC to join the
NEWMAC when that conference began sponsoring football in 2017. In November 2015, Becker announced it would also be leaving the ECFC in 2017 to join what was then known as the New England Football Conference, which by the time of the college's departure would be rebranded as
Commonwealth Coast Football. Becker's departure would have left the ECFC without the minimum seven teams necessary to maintain the league's automatic bid to the Division III playoffs. But on January 27, 2016, the ECFC announced that
Alfred State College and
Dean College would be joining the conference for the 2017 season.
Later developments The ECFC would later see two schools announce their departure from the conference, placing its automatic bid to the Division III playoffs in doubt once again. First, Husson announced in June 2017 that it would join Commonwealth Coast Football in 2019. Then, in April 2018, the financially struggling Mount Ida announced that it would close at the end of the 2017–18 school year, with the campus to be purchased by the
University of Massachusetts Amherst. The following month, however, saw the announcement of a future member, as
Keystone College, set to add football as a club sport in 2019 before upgrading to full varsity status in 2020, would join the ECFC upon reaching varsity status.
2020s realignment and dissolution The ECFC faced significant member attrition throughout the 2020s. It began on June 23, 2021, when SUNY Maritime announced its departure from the ECFC at the end of 2022 to join the
New England Women's and Men's Athletic Conference as a football affiliate for the 2023 season. On April 1, 2022, Keystone announced its addition to the
Landmark Conference as a football affiliate also for 2023, when Landmark starts its sponsorship of that sport. The loss of members continued at a rapid pace through 2023: Alfred State announced it would be joining the
Empire 8 in 2025 as a football affiliate, while Anna Maria, Dean, and Castleton University (now known as
Vermont State University–Castleton) announced they would all join the
Massachusetts State Collegiate Athletic Conference, with Anna Maria to join as a full member in 2025, and Castleton & Dean to join as affiliates in 2024 and 2025, respectively. Lastly, Gallaudet, the final remaining member, announced on July 3, 2024, that they had received an invitation to join the
Old Dominion Athletic Conference as an associate member for football for the 2025 season, bringing an end to the ECFC after 15 years. ==Member schools==