Wilmington College is a private college in Wilmington, Ohio. It was established by Quakers in 1870 and is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission. Wilmington College is known for its Agriculture program, its Athletic Training program, and its Education program. In fall 2018, the College set an enrollment record, bringing in 450 new students for the academic year, totaling 1,103 students on Wilmington's main campus, and 139 students at Wilmington's two Cincinnati branches at Blue Ash and Cincinnati State.
Academics
Wilmington College only offers undergraduate programs. The college's Watson Library is a member of the Ohio Private Academic Libraries consortium and the OhioLINK consortium that provides an integrated catalog, e-resources, and more than 100 research databases.
Campuses
Wilmington, Ohio
Blue Ash, Ohio
Cincinnati State
Main campus
Academic buildings
College Hall : Historic building present at Wilmington College's founding in 1870. Houses classrooms, faculty offices, offices of Admission, Financial Aid, the President's Office, and Academic Affairs. Added to National Register of Historic Places in 1972.
Bailey Hall : Began as a science building for the college, and later renovated into student housing. Renovated to become home of the College's science programs once again temporarily during ongoing renovations to Kettering Hall.
S. Arthur Watson Library : The College library, named for former College president S. Arthur Watson. The building is home to the college archives, OhioLink, OPAL, and study space for students.
Thomas R. Kelly Religious Center : Kelly Religious Center houses the Campus Friends Meeting, The Office of Campus Ministry, faculty offices, classrooms, and the offices of the Wilmington Yearly Meeting.
Robinson Communication Center : Houses the Academic Resource Center, computer labs, photography labs and studios, the Communication Arts Department, and student publication offices.
Oscar F. Boyd Cultural Arts Center : Features David and June Harcum Art Gallery, the WC Theatre Department, 440-seat Hugh Heiland Theatre, Meriam R. Hare Quaker Heritage Center, T. Canby Jones Meetinghouse, and two-story academic wing with classrooms and faculty offices.
Center for Sport Sciences : Houses the College's nationally recognized Athletic Training program, indoor and outdoor practice facilities for all athletic teams, and offices for Drayer Physical Therapy Institute, Beacon Orthopedics and Sport Medicine, and chiropractic offices.
Center for the Sciences & Agriculture: Includes the renovated 34,000 square-foot former Kettering Science Hall and a 13,500 square-foot addition. The facility hosts 10 classrooms, 10 laboratories, three research labs, two 100-seat lecture halls and 30 offices.
Peace Resource Center
The Wilmington College Peace Resource Center, established in 1975, plays a major role in furthering the peacemaking and elements in the mission statement of the college, in large part through providing peace education materials, both locally and throughout the country. The PRC is known, in particular, for its Hiroshima/Nagasaki Memorial Collection founded on the archives of Barbara Leonard Reynolds, which the college believes is "the world's largest collection of reference materials related to the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki." Reynolds' archives are also housed in part at the Earle and Akie Reynolds Archive at the University of California, Santa Cruz. The Peace Resource Center is also known for its ProjectTRUST camp for middle schoolers and Positive Discipline training for educators. The Center has been active in the Wilmington Community in establishing peer mediation in the local schools. In August 2010, the Peace Resource Center of Wilmington College hosted the National Peace Academy's 2010 Peacebuilding Peacelearning Intensive program on the theme of "Capacitating Community Peacebuilding."
Residence halls
Denver Hall : Historic residence hall for fifty students.
Marble Hall : Residence hall built by students led by College president Samuel Marble. The building was dedicated with an Ohio Historical Marker in 2013.
Friends Hall : Residence halls in the center of campus for men and women.
Austin Pickett Hall : Two large joining buildings housing freshman residence halls.
Campus Village : Apartment-style residence buildings
College Commons : Townhouse units for upperclassmen
Greek life
Wilmington College recognizes thirteen Greek Letter Organizations: three national fraternities, three local fraternities, two national sororities and three local sororities, and two auxiliaries. This group of thirteen Greek organizations constitutes the membership of the Greek Council. Additionally, Wilmington College boasts several honor societies, some international in scope.
Men's organizations
Delta Theta Sigma, National, with Agricultural affinity
Wilmington College athletic teams are known as the "Fightin' Quakers". Their colors are dark green and lime green. The Quakers compete at the NCAA Division III level and have been a member of the Ohio Athletic Conference since 2000. Wilmington College offers nine men's teams and nine women's teams, including Men's sports