Marymount College (Kansas)

Marymount College
Active1922 (1922)–1989 (1989)
AffiliationSisters of St. Joseph
Religious affiliation
Roman Catholic
Location
38°50′27″N 97°34′34″W / 38.840836°N 97.576145°W / 38.840836; -97.576145

Marymount College was a four-year liberal arts college located in Salina, Kansas that opened in 1922 as a women's college. It was operated by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Concordia, Kansas. The original college was a three-story building that overlooked the Smoky Hill River. The single building on its 30-acre (12 ha) campus dominated the eastern edge of the city.

The school was accredited by the Higher Learning Commission in 1932. In the 1950s and 1960s, two dormitories and a Fine Arts building were erected. The three dormitories on campus housed 350 resident students. Marymount became coeducational in 1968, which met with mixed reactions from students and faculty. A multi-purpose physical education building was erected in 1971. Basketball coach Ken Cochran was hired for the 1970-71 year and two years after Marymount had begun to admit male full-time students.[citation needed]

Cochran developed a women's program in physical education[1] and built the school into a NAIA powerhouse, racking up a record of 285–56 in eleven seasons. The Marymount team enjoyed a streak of 106 straight home court wins, reached a national ranking in 10 years, and won a third place finale in 1976.[2]

Marymount closed in June 1989,[3] in a year that had an enrollment of 653 students.[4]

The Marymount records and student transcripts have been housed at several institutions since the closure. The student records are now stored at Kansas Wesleyan University. Earlier locations for records included St. Mary of the Plains College and Fort Hays State University in Hays, Kansas.[citation needed]

  1. ^ Building Skills for 38 Years - Fun & Fundamentals - hoasportscamps.com - Retrieved March 6, 2009
  2. ^ Meet the N.A.I.A.'s - Ken Cochran, founder of Pop-A-Shot naia.cstv.com - Retrieved March 9, 2009
  3. ^ Journal, Gary DemuthSalina. "Local author traces history of Marymount College". Salina Journal. Retrieved 2021-05-03.
  4. ^ EDUCATION; A Kansas College Teeters on Brink - New York Times - February 22, 1989