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New College of Florida

New College of Florida
Former names
New College of the University of South Florida
Type Public liberal arts college
Established 1960
Endowment $25 million
President Donal O'Shea
Students 835 (2014)
Location Sarasota, Florida, United States
Campus Urban, 144 acres (0.6 km2)
Colors Blue and White
Affiliations State University System of Florida
CPLAC
Website www.ncf.edu
New College of Florida
University rankings
Liberal arts colleges
U.S. News & World Report 87

New College of Florida is a public liberal arts college located in Sarasota, Florida, United States. It was founded as a private institution and is now an autonomous honors college of the State University System of Florida. In 2015, U.S. News & World Report ranked New College as the fifth best value public liberal arts college in the United States.

New College was conceived during the late 1950s, and founded in 1960 as a private college by local civic leaders for academically talented students. Financial assistance was provided by the Board of Homeland Missions of the United Church of Christ.George F. Baughman served as the first president from 1961 to 1965.

Envisioned as a new attempt at liberal arts education in the South, the core values of the freedom of inquiry and the responsibility of individual students for their own education were to be implemented through a unique academic program. Open to students of all races, genders, and religious affiliations, New College opened its doors in 1964 to a premier class of 101 students. Faculty members included the historian and philosopher, Arnold J. Toynbee, who was lured out of retirement to join the charter faculty.

By 1972, New College's ranks had swelled to more than 500 students and it had become known for its teaching-focused faculty, its unique courses and curricula, and its fiercely independent and hard-working students. As the 1970s progressed, although New College's academic program continued to mature, inflation threatened to undermine the economic viability of the institution. By 1975, the college was $3.9 million in debt and on the brink of insolvency, and the University of South Florida (USF) expressed interest in buying the land and facilities of the near-bankrupt college to establish a branch campus for the Sarasota and Bradenton area.

In an unusual agreement, the New College Board of Trustees agreed to hand over the school's campus and other assets to the state, at the time valued at $8.5 million, in exchange for the state paying off its debts and agreeing to continue to operate the school as a separate unit within the USF. The agreement stated that New College was to receive the same funding, per-student, as other programs at USF. The former New College Board of Trustees became the New College Foundation, and was required to raise money privately to supplement the state funds to reach the total necessary to run New College, at the time about a third of New College's $2-million-a-year operating budget. Under the agreement, New College was re-christened the "New College of the University of South Florida." USF started a Sarasota branch program that shared the bay front campus, and the schools began an uneasy relationship that would last for the next twenty-five years, with New College and the University of South Florida through its Sarasota branch program sharing the campus.


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