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College of Saint Rose

1920 establishments in New York (state)College of Saint RoseEducation in Albany, New YorkEducational institutions established in 1920Former Catholic universities and colleges in the United States
Organizations based in Albany, New YorkPrivate universities and colleges in New York (state)U.S. Route 20Universities and colleges in Albany County, New York

The College of Saint Rose is a private Roman Catholic college in Albany, New York. It was founded in 1920 by the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet as a women's college. It became fully co-educational in 1969. The following year, the college added laypersons to its board and became an independent college sponsored by the sisters. The college is in the Pine Hills neighborhood of Albany. It is a Division II member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). In October 2023, after many years of financial difficulties, it was announced the college was in danger of losing its accreditation. Soon after, in November 2023, the college board voted to close the school in May 2024.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article College of Saint Rose (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors).

College of Saint Rose
3rd Avenue, City of Albany

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N 42.663981 ° E -73.786781 °
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College of Saint Rose

3rd Avenue
12202 City of Albany
New York, United States
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First Congregational Church of Albany
First Congregational Church of Albany

The First Congregational Church of Albany, also known as The Ray Palmer Memorial, is located on Quail Street in the Woodlawn section of Albany, New York, United States. It is a brick building in the Colonial Revival architectural style built in the 1910s and expanded half a century later. In 2014 it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places.Within two years of its establishment in 1850 the congregation hosted the Albany Convention, a gathering which helped Congregationalism develop a nationwide reach. The Rev. Ray Palmer, later known for his hymns, guided the church through its early years, when it was located in downtown Albany, first in a former Presbyterian church and later in its own building. In the early 20th century, the church followed its congregants in moving out towards the more suburban areas of Albany being developed along the city's trolley lines. The Fuller & Robinson Company designed the present church, following the Wren–Gibbs tradition. It was the first Colonial Revival church in the city, attracting much local media attention. Construction was delayed by the onset of World War I; it was formally dedicated to Ray Palmer in 1919. As one of the first churches to establish itself in those areas, it formed a social center of the new neighborhood. After World War II, plans went ahead to build a Sunday school wing intended for the original church. It was completed, in an architecturally sympathetic modernist style, by the early 1960s. It continues to have an active congregation, affiliated with both the United Church of Christ and National Association of Congregational Christian Churches.