List of current and historical women's universities and colleges
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This is a list of current and historical women's universities and colleges.
A women's college is an institution of higher education where enrollment is all-female. In the United States, only private undergraduate institutions are single-sex (and many offer coeducational graduate programs); in other countries, laws and traditions vary.
Where institutions have become coeducational, this is noted, along with the year the enrollment policy was changed.
Australia
- Women's College of the University of Sydney, Sydney
- Women's College of the University of Queensland, St. Lucia, Queensland
Canada
- Brescia University College, London, Ontario
- Mount Saint Vincent University, Halifax, Nova Scotia (co-ed since 1967)
China
Korea
United Arab Emirates
United States
Alabama
California
Colorado
- Women's College of the University of Denver, Denver
Connecticut
- Connecticut College, New London (co-ed since 1969)
- Hartford College for Women, Hartford (a college of the University of Hartford)
- Saint Joseph College, West Hartford
District of Columbia
- Trinity University, Washington, D.C. (College of Arts and Sciences remains women-only)
Georgia
- Agnes Scott College, Decatur
- Brenau University, Gainesville
- Spelman College, Atlanta
- Wesleyan College, Macon
Illinois
- Lexington College, Chicago (hospitality management)
Indiana
Louisiana
- H. Sophie Newcomb Memorial College, New Orleans (a college of Tulane University)
Kentucky
Maryland
- College of Notre Dame of Maryland, Baltimore
- Hood College, Frederick (co-ed since 2002)
Massachusetts
- Bay Path College, Longmeadow
- 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 1881)
- Pine Manor College, Chestnut Hill
- Radcliffe College, Cambridge (one of the Seven Sisters, now an institute within Harvard University)
- Regis College, Weston
- Simmons College, Boston
- Smith College, Northampton (one of the Seven Sisters)
- Wellesley College, Wellesley (one of the Seven Sisters)
Minnesota
Mississippi
- Blue Mountain College, Blue Mountain
- Mississippi University for Women, Columbus (co-ed since 1982)
Missouri
Nebraska
New Jersey
- College of Saint Elizabeth, Morristown
- Douglass College, New Brunswick (a college of Rutgers University)
- Georgian Court University, Lakewood
New York
- Barnard College, New York (one of the Seven Sisters)
- College of New Rochelle, New Rochelle
- Marymount College, Tarrytown (a college of Fordham University)
- Russell Sage College, Troy
- 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
- Bennett College, Greensboro
- Meredith College, Raleigh
- Peace College, Raleigh
- Salem College, Winston-Salem
- University of North Carolina at Greensboro, Greensboro (co-ed since 1963)
Ohio
- Notre Dame College, South Euclid (co-ed since 2001)
- Ohio Wesleyan Female College, Delaware (now part of Ohio Wesleyan University)
- Ursuline College, Pepper Pike
Pennsylvania
- Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr (one of the Seven Sisters)
- Carlow University, Pittsburgh (co-ed since 1945)
- Cedar Crest College, Allentown
- Chatham College, Pittsburgh
- Chestnut Hill College, Philadelphia (co-ed since 2003)
- Immaculata University, Immaculata (co-ed since 2004)
- Moore College of Art and Design, Philadelphia
- Rosemont College, Rosemont
- Seton Hill University, Greensburg (co-ed since 1987(?))
- Wilson College, Chambersburg
South Carolina
Texas
- Texas Woman's University, Denton, Dallas and Houston (co-ed since 1972)
Vermont
- Trinity College of Vermont, Burlington (closed in 2000, campus purchased by the University of Vermont)
Virginia
- Hollins University, Roanoke
- James Madison University, Harrisonburg (co-ed since 1966)
- Mary Baldwin College, Staunton
- Radford University, Radford (co-ed since 1972)
- Randolph-Macon Woman's College, Lynchburg
- University of Mary Washington, Fredericksburg (co-ed since 1970)
- Westhampton College, Richmond (a college of the University of Richmond)