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Marymount Manhattan College 55th Street entrance. Marymount Manhattan College was founded in 1936 by the Religious of the Sacred Heart of Mary as a two-year women's college and a New York City extension of Marymount College, Tarrytown in Tarrytown, New York. In 1948, the college moved to its present location on East 71st Street and became a ...
Marymount School, a women's Catholic high school in Manhattan, was founded in 1926. In 1936, an extension of Marymount College, Tarrytown, was formed in Manhattan. It later became the co-educational college now known as Marymount Manhattan College. The original Marymount College, Tarrytown, was consolidated with Fordham University. In fall 2005 ...
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Berkeley College, Midtown Manhattan/Brooklyn; College of Westchester, White Plains; DeVry University. Keller Graduate School of Management; Five Towns College, Dix Hills; Island Drafting and Technical Institute [1] LIM College, Midtown Manhattan; Mandl College of Allied Health; Monroe University, Bronx/New Rochelle; New York Film Academy, Manhattan
Lynn University (Boca Raton, Florida) – formerly Marymount College of Boca Raton; Manhattanville University (Purchase, New York) – ended affiliation with the Catholic Church in 1971; Marist College (Poughkeepsie, New York) – ownership transferred to a lay board of trustees in 1969 [4] Marymount Manhattan College (New York, New York)
Finch College, Manhattan (closed in 1976) Hunter College, Manhattan (co-ed since 1964) Ingham University, Le Roy (closed in 1892) Keuka College, Keuka Park (co-ed since 1985) Ladycliff College, Highland Falls, New York (co-ed in 1974, closed in 1980) LIM College, Manhattan (co-ed since 1972) Kirkland College, Clinton (merged with Hamilton ...
Marymount became a four-year college in 1973. It added master's degree programs in 1979, and its first doctoral program, the clinical Doctor of Physical Therapy, in 2005. Its first male students were admitted into the nursing program in 1972, and the college became fully coeducational and changed its name to Marymount University in 1986. [3]
Lander College for Women – The Anna Ruth and Mark Hasten School, Upper East Side [7] University of Mount Saint Vincent, Riverdale, Bronx; Wagner College; Yeshiva University. Stern College for Women, Murray Hill, Manhattan; Yeshiva College, Washington Heights, Manhattan; Sy Syms School of Business, Washington Heights, Manhattan