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Iconic Leftist Hampshire College Permanently Closing at End of the Year

Iconic Leftist Hampshire College Permanently Closing at End of the Year

“Despite pursuing a financial sustainability plan and raising more than $55 million through its Change in the Making campaign, efforts in enrollment growth, debt refinancing and land development did not yield a viable path forward.”

https://youtu.be/vc6S2OSHYqM

The trustees of Hampshire College have voted to close the school after the fall semester of 2026. This marks the end of a process that began a few years ago when the school began to face the possibility of such a decision.

Located in central Massachusetts, Hampshire College is a progressive institution that makes other colleges look conservative by comparison. Following Trump’s election as president in 2016, students forced the school to fly the American flag at half-mast, drawing national attention and anger.

Hampshire is also pricey, with annual tuition of nearly $60,000, but despite the high price tag and increased fundraising efforts, the school has seen enrollment decline and finds itself in an unsustainable position.

WWLP News reports:

Hampshire College to close permanently after fall 2026 semester

Hampshire College’s board of trustees voted to permanently close the institution following the Fall 2026 semester. The decision comes after years of financial struggle and unsuccessful efforts to secure the college’s future.

The college has navigated financial challenges since 2019, experiencing declining enrollment, rising costs and an unstable funding environment that affects small, liberal arts colleges. Despite pursuing a financial sustainability plan and raising more than $55 million through its Change in the Making campaign, efforts in enrollment growth, debt refinancing and land development did not yield a viable path forward.

Hampshire College will provide academic, student life and transitional services to currently enrolled students through the end of the fall semester. The college will not admit a new class for Fall 2026 and all deposits from admitted students will be refunded.

Here’s a video report from WBZ News:

This is part of a statement released by the board of trustees and President Jennifer Chrisler:

even years ago, the Hampshire community presented the College with a powerful mandate: to maintain independence and remain true to Hampshire’s deepest-held values. Since then, we have all worked together toward those goals, facing daunting challenges with the ingenuity and resolve that define the best of what happens here. We left no stone unturned, no solution unexplored, and made many sacrifices along the way.

Despite this herculean effort, the financial pressures on the College’s operations have become increasingly complex, compounded by shifting external factors. As President Chrisler has shared regularly with our community and our regulatory agencies, we worked aggressively to increase enrollment, refinance existing debt, and realize new revenue via the sale of a portion of our land. We have long known that addressing these issues is essential to establishing a stable financial foundation, supporting long-term operations, and meeting regulatory requirements. We are faced with the clear, heartbreaking reality that progress on each of these three key factors has fallen far short of what we had hoped.

As a result, the Board of Trustees voted to permanently close Hampshire College following the fall 2026 semester. The rationale behind this painful vote reflects several realities. The College no longer has the resources to sustain full operations and meet our regulatory responsibilities. The inability to substantially grow enrollment would mean extraordinary cuts to our operating budgets to educate the student body we can reasonably anticipate. Additionally, the degree of short-term debt tied to our land assets means that even a favorable sale would not change our long-term financial trajectory given current enrollment.

This closure will get more attention than the closure of other schools.

Hampshire is the Zohran Mamdani of colleges.

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Comments

Let the disappointed students study actual Liberal Arts via Hillsdale College online. They will become better citizens and Americans.

    4fun in reply to Whitewall. | April 15, 2026 at 1:53 pm

    LOL, then they’d actually have to work at learning instead of smoking dope, protesting and hanging out in coffee shops trying to show they’re the most pure of heart and all others take a back seat to them.

      Whitewall in reply to 4fun. | April 15, 2026 at 2:06 pm

      Call it a ‘progressive’ struggle session. When yelling at the screen doesn’t change things maybe they might learn a little. On the sly of course.

    diver64 in reply to Whitewall. | April 15, 2026 at 4:18 pm

    All those Gender Studies and Afro American Reparations Studies are now moot. Whatever will they do?

The roaches leaving the burning house will just scurry to others and eventually bring them down, too.
.

    gibbie in reply to DSHornet. | April 15, 2026 at 4:07 pm

    The Domino Theory. Works for me.

    diver64 in reply to DSHornet. | April 15, 2026 at 4:19 pm

    Yeah. All those worthless “studies” the parents were throwing money at to get pookie out of the house will just transfer to somewhere else like Mt Holyoke or Evergreen and into HR studies.

UnCivilServant | April 15, 2026 at 1:23 pm

My first thought on seeing the headline was “They ran out of other peoples’ money.”

    alaskabob in reply to UnCivilServant. | April 15, 2026 at 1:27 pm

    What… the prosperous alumni didn’t see fit to support and sustain this fine institution? Maybe their “earned” degrees didn’t fair well except in drive thru venues.

Whittling the Marxism down!

Good thing this crazy college is going under. Woke colleges deserve to die a slow and horrible death.

patchman2076 | April 15, 2026 at 2:11 pm

Good, I won’t have to listen to these stupid Hampshire college commercials anymore on my morning drive.

JackinSilverSpring | April 15, 2026 at 2:27 pm

Despite the high price tag? Maybe, because of the high price tag, and most likely the worthless degrees.

I went to school in the Happy Valley, the land of the five (now four) colleges. Hampshire College was always a joke. The students there were enrolled so they wouldn’t be admitted to the asylum. I recall one night driving back to Amherst from Mt. Holyoke at about midnight and encountering a naked woman standing in the middle of Rt 116 near the campus entrance. Now, as a red blooded American boy, a naked college girl was my #1 goal. Not this chick. She was deeply stoned on some kind of hallucinogenic and it was not pretty at all. I called the paramedics and off she went to the ER. That right there was a microcosm of Hampshire College. Good riddance.

    xdevildog in reply to Peter Moss. | April 15, 2026 at 3:36 pm

    “. . . as a red blooded American boy, a naked college girl was my #1 goal.”

    Now that brought back some memories!

    diver64 in reply to Peter Moss. | April 15, 2026 at 4:21 pm

    I rolled through that lane quite a number of times. The kids going to those schools are wild. I even played an Ultimate Disc Tournament at Zoo Mass once upon a time. Talk about stoned people staggering around.

    fscarn in reply to Peter Moss. | April 15, 2026 at 5:56 pm

    As they say about closing time (midnight’s close enough),

    All the girls all get prettier at closin’ time
    They all begin to look like movie stars
    All the girls all get prettier at closin’ time
    When the change starts taking place
    It puts a glow on every face
    Of the fallen angels of the back street bars

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pGUjMVnLOS8

And so they join the parade of small liberal arts colleges closing because their business model is not viable.

command_liner | April 15, 2026 at 5:07 pm

Could Hampshire be re-opened as a treatment and recovery center, for those suffering from TDS and related mental illnesses? Call it Hampshire House. Be sure to get a grant of a billion or two from Maura Healey.

NB: My father and wife both went to school in that area, and I was there pretty often.

The Massachusetts Democratic Party approaches its “let them eat cake” moment.

2smartforlibs | April 15, 2026 at 5:40 pm

Lies get expensive.

Oh, no!

Anyway…

A high school peer went to Hampshire. Majored in Jungian psychology, or something like that. Much self study. He has written some books, but I doubt that royalties from those sales would have supported him for a month.

Then there was Antioch. It once was an unconventional place, but not crazy. Its work study program attracted many, My sister’s best friend in high school, who had the highest Math SAT for the girls in their class, went to Antioch. She went on to get a doctorate.

Through the decades, Antioch students went from unconventional to crazy. It closed down in 2008. It was reborn in 2008, but graduates only about 15-20 students a year. At its peak, it had about 2400 students, and enrolled 1200 for many years. It currently has 127 students.

Will Hampshire be reborn, like Antioch? I doubt it.

here is. a look at what was offered at this inst. of higher learning

Search Assist

Hampshire College offered a unique student-designed curriculum that allowed students to create their own academic programs rather than conforming to traditional majors. Popular areas of study included Art, Creative Writing, Dance, and Film/Video, among others.
College Raptor Wikipedia
Degree Programs at Hampshire College
Hampshire College is known for its innovative student-designed curriculum, allowing students to create personalized academic programs. Instead of traditional majors, students can explore various disciplines and tailor their education to their interests.
Popular Areas of Study
The following are some of the most popular areas of study at Hampshire College:
Art/Art Studies
Creative Writing
Dance
Film/Video and Photographic Arts
Academic Structure
Hampshire College’s academic structure emphasizes flexibility and interdisciplinary learning. Students progress through three divisions:
Division I: Course-based projects
Division II: Semester-long collaborative projects
Division III: Year-long, self-designed independent projects
This approach encourages students to engage deeply with their chosen fields while developing critical thinking and problem-solving skills.

lol and for this they paid 60K

“Following Trump’s election as president in 2016, students forced the school to fly the American flag at half-mast -”

God damned Yankee attitudes.

Again.

WildernessLawyer | April 16, 2026 at 8:34 am

One must have a heart of stone to read about the death of Hampshire College without laughing. The place was always an overpriced joke.

They recently tried to develop some of their land (to create low income housing, of course). That it was partially wetlands didn’t seem to matter much until they were denied. I drive by campus several days a week on my way to the golf course. I have known good people who worked there, but I won’t pine over the loss.
Side note: two stories today centered within a few miles of my domicile–and together they don’t scratch the surface of the insanity here in the valley.

My very first thought was, ‘Well, one down, and won’t be missed, but there are a lot more to go. Wonder how long it will take for the rest to follow’? I have my fingers crossed that this is a sign of things to come, and the future is possibly brighter then ever for trade schools.

Unintended consequences? Will the loss of that student population spell economic hardship for the profitable ‘recreational drug’ -growing industry that supports much of Pioneer Valley in weatern MA?

College is no longer a life stage for the very wealthy progeny. Nine “areas of ethnic or racial study” including “Queer studies” doesn’t bode well for productive employment. (see their website)

I might say “learn to code,” but that would seem to be a problem these days. LOL