Notre Dame College (New Hampshire)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Notre Dame College was a liberal arts college located in Manchester, New Hampshire and affiliated with the Sisters of Holy Cross of Montreal, Canada. It closed in May 2002, due to "difficult enrollment and financial issues."

[edit] External links

  • New Hampshire public radio story about the closure
v • d • e
Colleges and Universities in New Hampshire
Colleges and Universities
Antioch University New England • Chester College of New England • Colby-Sawyer College • Daniel Webster College • Dartmouth College • Franklin Pierce Law Center • Franklin Pierce University • Hesser College • Lebanon College • Magdalen College • McIntosh College • New England College • New Hampshire Institute of Art • Southern New Hampshire University • Rivier College • Saint Anselm College • Thomas More College of Liberal Arts
University System
Granite State College • Keene State College • Plymouth State University • University of New Hampshire • University of New Hampshire at Manchester
Community College System
of New Hampshire
New Hampshire Technical Institute • Manchester Community College
Defunct Institutions
Franconia College • Notre Dame College
Categories: Manchester, New Hampshire | Universities and colleges in New Hampshire | Defunct universities and colleges in New Hampshire
Views
  • Article
  • Discussion
  • Current revision
Navigation
  • Main Page
  • Contents
  • Featured content
  • Current events
Interaction
  • About Wikipedia
  • Community portal
  • Recent changes
  • Contact Wikipedia
  • Donate to Wikipedia
  • Help
Powered by MediaWiki
Wikimedia Foundation
  • This page was last modified 14:31, 25 March 2008 by Anonymous user(s) of Wikipedia. Based on work by Wikipedia user(s) Kane5187, RobotG, Beginning, Rudjek, Ken Gallager, PaulHanson, Cornellrockey, Vaquero100 and Jwisell1.
  • All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.)
    Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) tax-deductible nonprofit charity.
  • About Wikipedia
  • Disclaimers