A Just Future, Appendix A

US Higher Education Institutions

Table (A-1): Key Dates in the History of Access to the Top 10 Colleges and Universities in the US (2025)

The table below is based on the 2023-2024 US News and World Report. While I am aware of the drawbacks of using this dataset, it nevertheless provides a useful category of analysis for the purposes of the book. You can read more about US News and World Report’s methodology here.

As you can see, the top four-year colleges and universities in the country tend to be older, historically white institutions that for centuries took both formal and informal measures to exclude marginalized student populations, in particular women and African-American students.

A note on the admission of African American students: At some universities, Black Americans were excluded in practice though not in policy. This was the case, for example, at Princeton University. As a result, some of the earlier nineteenth-century admissions dates for African-American students represent merely the year that the first Black American student was admitted, not the definitive moment when African-American students arrived in significant numbers. Not until well into the twentieth century did large numbers of African Americans and other students of color enter historically white colleges and universities.

By contrast, the records of some universities indicate the introduction of a more formal policy of extending college admission to African-American students. This was the case for Johns Hopkins University and Yale University.

Last revised August 2025 | Table Archive

 

Table A-1: Key Dates in the History of Access to the Top 10 Colleges and Universities in the US

InstitutionDate FoundedDate Women AdmittedDate African Americans Admitted
#1- Princeton University1746

1969

1942

#2-Massachusetts Institute of Technology1861

1882

1888

#3-Harvard University*1635

1975

1870*

#4-Stanford University1885

1891

1891

#5-Yale University1701

1968

1964

#6-California Institute of Technology1891

1970

1929

#6-Duke University1838

1892

1961

#6- Johns Hopkins University1876

1970

1945

#6-Northwestern University*1851

1873

1966*

#10- University of Pennsylvania1740

1974

1879

Table (2): HBCUs in the United States

After the abolition of slavery, African Americans founded their own colleges and universities across the country to remedy their centuries-long exclusion from institutions of higher education. Thus, the late nineteenth century witnessed the rise of a new category of university: historically black colleges and universities, or HBCUs.

According to the US Department of Education, the Higher Education Act of 1965 defines an HBCU as “…any historically black college or university that was established prior to 1964, whose principal mission was, and is, the education of black Americans, and that is accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency or association determined by the Secretary [of Education] to be a reliable authority as to the quality of training offered or is, according to such an agency or association, making reasonable progress toward accreditation.”

On April 23, 2025, the Trump administration issued an Executive Order to re-establish a White House initiative from his first term. The initiative has two stated aims: (1) “increasing the private-sector role” in HBCUs and (2) “enhancing HBCUs’ capabilities to serve our Nation’s young adults.” That said, many HBCUs are unsure of their financial future given the administration’s assault on DEI. No HBCUs closed in the 2024-2025 academic year.

The following table includes HBCUs that have been shuttered over the years.

 

Last revised August 2025 | Table Archive

 

Table A-2: HBCUs in the United States

InstitutionStateDate Founded
Alabama A&M UniversityAlabama1875
Alabama State UniversityAlabama1867
Bishop State Community CollegeAlabama1927
Concordia College Alabama (closed 2018)Alabama1922
Gadsden State Community CollegeAlabama1925
J.F. Drake State Technical CollegeAlabama1961
Lawson State Community CollegeAlabama1949
Miles CollegeAlabama1898
Oakwood UniversityAlabama1896
Selma UniversityAlabama1878
Shelton State Community CollegeAlabama1979
Stillman CollegeAlabama1895
Talladega CollegeAlabama1867
Trenholm State Technical CollegeAlabama1962
Tuskegee UniversityAlabama1881
University of Arkansas at Pine BluffArkansas1873
Arkansas Baptist CollegeArkansas1884
Philander Smith CollegeArkansas1877
Shorter CollegeArkansas1886
Delaware State UniversityDelaware1891
University of the District of ColumbiaDistrict of Columbia1851
Howard UniversityDistrict of Columbia1867
Bethune Cookman UniversityFlorida1904
Edward Waters CollegeFlorida1866
Florida A&M UniversityFlorida1884
Florida Memorial UniversityFlorida1879
Southwestern Christian CollegeTexas1865
Albany State UniversityGeorgia1903
Carver CollegeGeorgia1943
Clark Atlanta UniversityGeorgia1865
Fort Valley State UniversityGeorgia1895
Interdenominational Theological CenterGeorgia1958
Morehouse CollegeGeorgia1867
Morehouse School of MedicineGeorgia1975
Morris Brown CollegeGeorgia1881
Paine CollegeGeorgia1882
Savannah State UniversityGeorgia1890
Spelman CollegeGeorgia1881
Kentucky State UniversityKentucky1885
Simmons College of KentuckyKentucky1899
Dillard UniversityLouisiana1930
Grambling State UniversityLouisiana1896
New Orleans University (closed 1935)Louisiana1869
Southern University at New OrleansLouisiana1956
Southern University at Shreveport Louisiana1967
Southern University and A&M CollegeLouisiana1880
Straight College (closed 1934)Louisiana1868
Xavier University of LouisianaLouisiana1925
Bowie State UniversityMaryland1865
Coppin State UniversityMaryland1900
University of Maryland Eastern ShoreMaryland1886
Morgan State UniversityMaryland1867
Pensole Lewis College of Business and DesignMichigan1928
Alcorn State UniversityMississippi1871
Coahoma Community CollegeMississippi1924
Hinds Community CollegeMississippi1903
Jackson State UniversityMississippi1877
Mary Holmes College (closed 2005)Mississippi1892
Mississippi Valley State UniversityMississippi1950
Mount Hermon Female Seminary (closed 1924)Mississippi1875
Rust CollegeMississippi1866
Tougaloo CollegeMississippi1871
Harris-Stowe State UniversityMissouri1857
Lincoln University -MissouriMissouri1866
Barber-Scotia CollegeNorth Carolina1867
Bennett CollegeNorth Carolina1873
Elizabeth City State UniversityNorth Carolina1891
Fayetteville State UniversityNorth Carolina1867
Johnson C. Smith UniversityNorth Carolina1867
Livingstone CollegeNorth Carolina1879
North Carolina A&T State UniversityNorth Carolina1891
North Carolina Central UniversityNorth Carolina1910
Saint Augustine's UniversityNorth Carolina1867
Shaw UniversityNorth Carolina1865
St. Augustine's University North Carolina1867
Winston-Salem State UniversityNorth Carolina1892
Central State UniversityOhio1887
Payne Theological *Ohio1894
Wilberforce UniversityOhio1856
Langston UniversityOklahoma1897
Cheyney University of PennsylvaniaPennsylvania1837
Lincoln University -PennsylvaniaPennsylvania1854
Allen UniversitySouth Carolina1870
Benedict CollegeSouth Carolina1867
Claflin UniversitySouth Carolina1869
Clinton Junior CollegeSouth Carolina1894
Denmark Technical CollegeSouth Carolina1947
Morris CollegeSouth Carolina1908
South Carolina State UniversitySouth Carolina1896
Voorhees CollegeSouth Carolina1897
American Baptist CollegeTennessee1924
Fisk UniversityTennessee1865
Knoxville CollegeTennessee1875
Lane CollegeTennessee1882
Lemoyne-Owen CollegeTennessee1862
Meharry Medical CollegeTennessee1876
Morristown College (closed 1994)Tennessee1881
Tennessee State UniversityTennessee1912
Guadalupe College (closed 1937)Texas1884
Huston-Tillotson UniversityTexas1875
Jarvis Christian CollegeTexas1913
Paul Quinn CollegeTexas1872
Prairie View A&M UniversityTexas1876
St. Philips CollegeTexas1898
Texas CollegeTexas1894
Texas Southern UniversityTexas1927
Wiley CollegeTexas1873
University of the Virgin IslandsUnited States Virgin Islands1962
Hampton UniversityVirginia1861
Norfolk State UniversityVirginia1935
Saint Paul's College (closed 2013)Virginia1888
Virginia State UniversityVirginia1882
Virginia Union UniversityVirginia1865
Virginia University of LynchburgVirginia1886
Bluefield State CollegeWest Virginia1895
Storer College (closed 1958)West Virginia1867
West Virginia State UniversityWest Virginia1890
Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science (a Historically Black Medical College)California1966
Prentiss Institute Jr. College (closed 1989)Mississippi1907

Last revised August 2025 | Table Archive

 

From their founding, several HWCUs experimented with admitting and educating Native students. These experiments were, by and large, short-lived. In the nineteenth century, there was another push to found schools for Native Americans, often at the direction of white philanthropists interested in assimilating Indigenous groups and preparing them to integrate into a racially-stratified US workforce.

During the 1960s and 1970s, Native Americans made great strides gaining autonomy over their own education. For example, Navajo Community College was established in 1968. Following the passage of the Indian Education Act of 1972 and the Indian Self-Determination and Assistance Act of 1975, federally-recognized Native American tribes gained more control over their own education and could establish their own tribal colleges. 

According to scholar Chara H. Bohan, “tribally-controlled colleges have helped promote Indian culture, foster Indian educational philosophy and curriculum, and provided a comfortable environment, the necessary facilities and requisite funding for Indian students.” 

In spite of their importance to Native communities, tribal colleges remain chronically under-funded by the federal government. As a result, closures have become increasingly common. In 2025, Bacone College, founded in 1880 as Indian University, closed its doors. Another tribal college, Northwest Indian College, closed its Swinomish Extended Site. As of this writing (August 2025), just 35 tribal colleges remain in the United States.

The Trump administration’s initiatives are poised to gut tribal colleges further. On February 11, 2025, an Executive Order forced the reduction in federal staffing at the Bureau of Indian Education, imperiling many tribal colleges. In June 2025, the Department of the Interior proposed an 83 percent budget cut to federal funding for tribal colleges. If passed, many more tribal colleges will close.

 

Last revised August 2025 | Table Archive

 
 

Table A-3: Tribal Colleges in the United States

InstitutionDate FoundedState
Aaniiih Nakoda College (fort belknap community college)1984Montana
Bay Mills Community College1984Michigan
Blackfeet Community College1976Montana
Cankdeska Cikana Community College (formerly Little Hoop Community College)1974North Dakota
Chief Dull Knife College1975Montana
College of Menominee Nation1993Wisconsin
College of the Muscogee Nation2004Oklahoma
Diné College (formerly Navajo Community College)1968Arizona
Fond du Lac Tribal and Community College1987Minnesota
Fort Peck Community College1978Montana
Haskell Indian Nations University1884Kansas
Iḷisaġvik College1996Alaska
Institute of American Indian Arts1890New Mexico
Keweenaw Bay Ojibwa Community College1975Michigan
Lac Courte Oreilles Ojibwa Community College1982Wisconsin
Leech Lake Tribal College1990Minnesota
Little Big Horn College1977Montana
Little Priest Tribal College1996Nebraska
Navajo Technical University (formerly Crownpoint Institute of Technology)1979New Mexico
Nebraska Indian Community College1973Nebraska
Northwest Indian College- closed Swinomish Extended Site in 2025)1973Washington
Nueta Hidatsa Sahnish College (Fort Berthold College)1973North Dakota
Oglala Lakota College (combined with Cheyenn River College Center)1970South Dakota
Red Lake Nation College1987Minnesota
Saginaw Chippewa Tribal College1998Michigan
Salish Kootenai College1977Montana
Sinte Gleska University1971South Dakota
Sisseton Wahpeton College1979South Dakota
Sitting Bull College (formerly Standing Rock College)1972North Dakota
Southwestern Indian Polytechnic Institute1971New Mexico
Stone Child College1984Montana
Tohono O'odham Community College1988Arizona
Turtle Mountain Community College1972North Dakota
United Tribes Technical College1969North Dakota
University of North Carolina at Pembroke (formerly Croatan Normal School)1887North Carolina
White Earth Tribal and Community College1997Minnesota
Wind River Tribal College1997Wyoming

Sources:

 

Last revised August 2025 | Table Archive