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Bryn Athyn College of the New Church

Bryn Athyn College of the New Church
Bryn Athyn College seal.png
Motto Think for yourself. Live for others.
Type Private
Established 1877
President Brian Blair
Academic staff
64
Students 303
Location Bryn Athyn, Pennsylvania, United States
Campus Suburban, 130 acres (53 ha)
Colors Red and white
Mascot Lion
Website brynathyn.edu

Bryn Athyn College is a small, private Christian liberal arts college located 20 miles (32 km) northeast of Philadelphia in the borough of Bryn Athyn, Pennsylvania, a National Historic Landmark District. Bryn Athyn is affiliated with the General Church of the New Jerusalem.

Bryn Athyn College has been educating undergraduates since its incorporation under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1877. Then known as the Academy of the New Church, its original purpose was (like most institutions of higher learning in those days) to train ministers. In 1890 the Academy established a separate organization: the General Church of the New Jerusalem, a religious body based on the teachings of Emanuel Swedenborg. A generous endowment from John Pitcairn and others enabled the Academy of the New Church to very quickly expand from a seminary into a high school and a two-year college. In 1914 it became a four-year college and by 1922 the College was conferring both Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees. In 1997, the Academy of the New Church College adopted a new name: Bryn Athyn College of the New Church.

Today, while remaining grounded in the tenets of the New Church and the teachings of Emanuel Swedenborg, the College is growing rapidly. In August 2008 the College opened several new student residence cottages, and broke ground for a new science center and a new admissions and student life building, both of which were completed in September 2009.

The College's original campus and surrounding community of Bryn Athyn were designed in 1893 by Charles Eliot of the firm Olmstead, Olmstead, and Eliot – the renowned firm responsible for the design of Central Park in New York City. The campus is located in the borough of Bryn Athyn, in the suburbs of Philadelphia.

Much of the College's 130-acre (53 ha) campus is undeveloped open land, and the nearby Pennypack Ecological Restoration Trust supplements the natural surroundings with eight miles (13 km) of trails following a creek through woods and fields.


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