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Colby–Sawyer College

Colby-Sawyer College
ColbySawyer-ColgateHall.jpg Colgate Hall
Motto Paratae Servire ("Prepare to Serve")
Type Private
Established 1837
Endowment $29.3 million
President Susan D. Stuebner
Academic staff
Student/faculty ratio: 13:1
Undergraduates 1,415
Location New London, New Hampshire, United States
Campus Rural; 30 buildings on 200 acres (0.81 km2)
College Board code 3281
Mascot Chargers (Horse)
Website www.colby-sawyer.edu

Colby–Sawyer College is a private, comprehensive baccalaureate college situated on a 200-acre (0.81 km2) campus in New London, in the Lake Sunapee region of New Hampshire, founded as a coeducational academy in 1837.

A legislative charter was granted by the State of New Hampshire in 1837 to 11 New London citizens for the purpose of establishing a school in the town. The eleven men who were named as the academy’s incorporators were Joseph Colby, Anthony Colby, Perley Burpee, Jonathan Greeley, John Brown, Jonathan Herrick, David Everett, Samuel Carr, Walter Flanders, Jonathan Addison, and Marshall Trayne.

It was a coeducational secondary school, for which Susan Colby served as the first teacher and principal. It opened with a student body of 26 girls and one boy, but soon enrolled 54 more male students.

In 1858 the New Hampton Literary and Theological Institution moved to Fairfax, Vermont, and the New Hampshire Baptists, with encouragement from former Governor Anthony Colby and New London’s Baptist minister, Ebenezer Dodge, assumed responsibility for the Academy. The name was changed to the New London Literary and Scientific Institute. The new Board of Trustees was made up of twenty-four members, three-fourths of whom had to be from New Hampshire but not from New London and three-fourths of whom also had to be Baptists in good standing.

In 1854, the Ladies Boarding House (later called Heidelberg) was built (on what is now the New London green) to accommodate up to forty female students and the female faculty. Anthony Colby also purchased the original New London town meeting house and moved it to campus, where it was renovated to provide twenty double rooms for the male students. The building is called Colby Hall. In 1870 the new brick Academy building was dedicated, located on the present site of Colgate Hall. The building provided dormitory space for one hundred female students as well as classrooms, laboratories, library, gymnastic facilities, chapel, dining room, kitchen, and laundry facilities.

The New London Literary and Scientific Institution was in 1878 renamed Colby Academy in tribute to the ongoing support of the Colby family of New London.


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