Founding In 1917, Providence College was founded as an all-male school through the efforts of the
Diocese of Providence and the
Dominican Province of St. Joseph. The central figure in the college's incorporation was
Matthew Harkins, Bishop of Providence, who sought an institution that would establish a center of advanced learning for the Catholic youth of Rhode Island. Opening its doors at the corner of Eaton Street and River Avenue with only one building, Harkins Hall, Under President Lorenzo C. McCarthy, O.P. (1927–1936), Providence College athletics soon received their moniker as the "Friars." With black and white as team colors, the school had early success in
basketball,
football, and
baseball. In 1933, the school received
regional accreditation by the
New England Association of Schools and Colleges. By 1939, Aquinas Hall dormitory had been built to accommodate more students enrolling in general studies, but with the impact of World War II upon enrollment, President John J. Dillon, O.P. (1936–1944) lobbied Rhode Island's congressional delegation to pressure the War Department to assign Providence College an
Army Specialized Training Program unit. Unit #1188 arrived on campus in the summer of 1943, allowing the college to continue operation. A class of approximately 380 soldiers-in-training studied engineering at Providence College for a year before going overseas. Slavin also oversaw the establishment of the
Reserve Officers' Training Corps (ROTC) on campus in 1951 and the Liberal Arts Honors Program in 1957.
Co-educational shift In 1967, the college added its first lay faculty members in the Departments of Theology and Philosophy, as well as its first full-time female faculty member. The campus was then split in half by Huxley Avenue, providing an "Upper" campus (due to the uphill nature of the landscape on Smith Hill) and "Lower" campus (the new, flatter area of the college). In 1974, the School of Continuing Education awarded the college's first
Associate's degree. Meanwhile, the demographics of the student body continued to change, as women outnumbered men in incoming classes and non-Rhode Island students soon outnumbered in-state students. Men's basketball again took center stage on the Providence campus, as coach
Rick Pitino and senior
Billy Donovan took the Friars to their second Final Four appearance in the
1987 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament. Cunningham used the exposure and fundraising opportunities to build two apartment-style residence halls on campus, Davis and Bedford Halls, providing an alternative to dormitory and off-campus housing for upperclassmen. and oversaw the new influence of women's athletics at Providence, as several alumni and then-current students won the gold medal for
women's ice hockey as part of the
U.S. national team in the
1998 Winter Olympics in
Nagano, Japan. By 2001, a new on-campus chapel was built, St. Dominic Chapel, followed three years later by the construction of two other major buildings on "Lower" campus: Suites Hall, a suite-style residence hall to provide added upperclassmen housing, and the Smith Center for the Arts. In 2012, a groundbreaking was held for the Ruane Center for the Humanities. Shanley also removed the college's
SAT requirement for admissions in addition to transferring a significant portion of the school's scholarship funds to need-based aid, In 2018, Providence College constructed a new building dedicated to the study of natural science, called the Science Complex. In addition, the $30 million Ruane Friar Development Center (RFDC) was opened, providing a multi-purpose athletic facility featuring a new innovation lab, an expanded sports medicine center, and a student-athlete fueling station. ==Campus==