All Women s Colleges Alabama Judson College, Marion California Mills College, Oakland Mount St. Mary's College, Los Angeles San Diego College for Women, San Diego (closed 1972) Scripps College, Claremont Colorado Women's College of the University of Denver, Denver Connecticut Albertus Magnus College, New Haven (co-ed since 1985) Annhurst College, South Woodstock (closed in 1980) Connecticut College, New London (co-ed since 1969) Diocesan Sisters College, Bloomfield (closed in 1969) Hartford College for Women, Hartford (a college of the University of Hartford; closed in 2003) Mount Sacred Heart College, Hamden (closed in 1997) Saint Joseph College, West Hartford District of Columbia Mount Vernon College for Women, Georgetown (closed in 1999; campus now part of George Washington University) Trinity Washington University, Washington (College of Arts and Sciences remains women-only) Washington College of Law at American University, Tenleytown (although femaleserving and originally women-only, first admitted males in 1897)
Florida Florida State University, Tallahassee (continuously co-ed since 1947) Georgia Agnes Scott College, Decatur Americus Female College, Americus (closed in 1879) Andrew College, Cuthbert (co-ed since 1956) Bethel Female College, Cuthbert (closed in 1875) Brenau University, Gainesville Cox College, LaGrange (closed in 1934) Georgia College & State University, Milledgeville (co-ed since 1967) Houston Female College, Perry (closed in 1896) LaGrange College, LaGrange (co-ed since 1953) Madison Collegiate Institute and Methodist Female College, Madison (closed in 1880) Shorter College, Rome (co-ed since 1950s) Spelman College, Atlanta Tift College, Forsyth (merged with Mercer University in 1986) Valdosta State University, Valdosta (co-ed since 1950) Wesleyan College, Macon Illinois Lexington College, Chicago MacMurray College, Jacksonville (fully co-ed institution since 1969; a separate men's college had been formed in 1955) Mundelein College, Chicago (closed in 1991; now a part of Loyola University Chicago) Indiana Iowa Saint Mary's College, Notre Dame Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College, Saint Mary-of-the-Woods
Ottumwa Heights College, Ottumwa (closed in 1980) Louisiana H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, New Orleans (a college of Tulane University) Kentucky Campbell-Hagerman College, Lexington (closed; date unknown) Hamilton College, Lexington (closed in 1932) Midway College, Midway Maryland College of Notre Dame of Maryland, Baltimore Goucher College, Towson (co-ed since 1986) Hood College, Frederick (co-ed since 2002) Mount Saint Agnes College, Baltimore (closed in 1971; now part of Loyola College in Maryland) Massachusetts Aquinas College, Milton and Newton (closed in 1999) Bay Path College, Longmeadow Boston Female Medical School, Boston (closed 1874) Cardinal Cushing College, Brookline (closed in 1972) Emmanuel College, Boston (co-ed since 2001) Lesley College, Cambridge (a college of Lesley University; co-ed since 2005) Mount Holyoke College, South Hadley (one of the Seven Sisters) Oread Institute, Worcester (closed in 1934) Pine Manor College, Chestnut Hill Radcliffe College, Cambridge (one of the Seven Sisters; closed in 1999 and now an institute within Harvard University) Regis College, Weston (will become co-ed in 2007) Simmons College, Boston Smith College, Northampton (one of the Seven Sisters) Wellesley College, Wellesley (one of the Seven Sisters) Wheaton College (co-ed since the 1980s)
Minnesota College of Saint Benedict, Collegeville College of St. Catherine, Saint Paul Mississippi Blue Mountain College, Blue Mountain Mississippi University for Women, Columbus (co-ed since 1982) Missouri Cottey College, Nevada Hardin College and Conservatory of Music, Mexico (closed in 1931) Stephens College, Columbia Synodical College, Fulton (closed in 1928) Nebraska College of Saint Mary, Omaha New Jersey Assumption College for Sisters, Mendham College of Saint Elizabeth, Morristown Douglass College, Rutgers University, New Brunswick Englewood Cliffs College, Englewood Cliffs (closed in 1974) Evelyn College for Women, Princeton University, Princeton (closed in 1897) Georgian Court University, Lakewood New York Barnard College, New York (one of the Seven Sisters)
The College of New Rochelle, New Rochelle Elmira College, Elmira (co-ed since 1969) Kirkland College, Clinton (closed in 1978) Marymount College, Tarrytown (a college of Fordham University)(closing) Russell Sage College, Troy Sarah Lawrence College, Yonkers (co-ed since 1969) Stern College for Women, New York (a college of Yeshiva University) Vassar College, Poughkeepsie (one of the Seven Sisters; co-ed since 1969) Wells College, Aurora (co-ed since 2005) William Smith College, Geneva (a college of the Hobart and William Smith Colleges) North Carolina Ohio Bennett College, Greensboro Chowan College, Murfreesboro (co-ed since 1931) Meredith College, Raleigh Peace College, Raleigh Salem College, Winston-Salem University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro (co-ed since 1963) Edgecliff College (Our Lady of Cincinnati), Cincinnati, Ohio (now part of Xavier University (Cincinnati) in 1980) Lake Erie College, Painesville (co-ed since 1986) Notre Dame College, South Euclid (co-ed since 2001) Ohio Dominican University, Columbus (co-ed since 1964) Ohio Wesleyan Female College, Delaware (closed in 1877; now part of Ohio Wesleyan University) Ursuline College, Pepper Pike Western College for Women, Oxford (closed in 1974; now part of Miami University) Pennsylvania Beaver College, Glenside (now Arcadia University and co-ed) Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr (one of the Seven Sisters) Carlow University, Pittsburgh (co-ed since 1945, though still women-serving) Cedar Crest College, Allentown Chatham College, Pittsburgh (graduate school is co-ed)
Chestnut Hill College, Philadelphia (co-ed since 2003) Immaculata University, Malvern (co-ed since 2005) Moore College of Art and Design, Philadelphia Rosemont College, Rosemont Seton Hill University, Greensburg (co-ed since 2002) Wilson College, Chambersburg Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia (co-ed since 1970 -- dropping "Woman's" from name -- but is now the Drexel University's College of Medicine) Rhode Island Pembroke College, Brown University, Providence (closed in 1971) South Carolina Columbia College, Columbia Converse College, Spartanburg Tennessee Texas Utah Newman College for Women, Jefferson City (merged into Carson-Newman College in 1888) Carr-Burdette College, Sherman (closed in 1929) Texas Woman's University, Denton, Dallas and Houston (co-ed since 1972) College of Saint Mary-of-the-Wasatch, Salt Lake City (closed in 1969) Vermont
Bennington College, Bennington (co-ed since 1969) Trinity College of Vermont, Burlington (closed in 2000; campus purchased by the University of Vermont) Virginia Elizabeth College, Salem (closed in 1922) Hollins University, Roanoke James Madison University, Harrisonburg (co-ed since 1966) Longwood University, Farmville, Virginia (co-ed since 1976) Marion College, Marion, Virginia (closed in 1967; alumnae adopted by Roanoke College, a sister Lutheran college) Mary Baldwin College, Staunton Radford University, Radford (co-ed since 1972) Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Lynchburg Sweet Briar College, Sweet Briar University of Mary Washington, Fredericksburg (co-ed since 1970) Virginia Women's Institute for Leadership, Staunton (military college based at Mary Baldwin) Westhampton College, Richmond (a college of the University of Richmond) Wisconsin Alverno College, Milwaukee Mount Mary College, Milwaukee Viterbo University, La Crosse (co-ed since 1970)