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Coordinates: 42°43′06″N 73°45′13″W / 42.71833°N 73.75361°W / 42.71833; -73.75361
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'''Siena College''' is an independent [[Catholicism|Catholic]] [[Liberal Arts]] [[College]] located in[[Loudonville, New York]], in the [[United States]]. Founded in 1937 by seven [[Franciscan]] friars, the college enrolls nearly 3,000 students. The {{convert|164|acre|km2|sing=on}} campus is known throughout the community for its gold-domed building, Siena Hall, which has become both its symbol and signature.
'''Siena College''' is an independent [[Catholicism|Catholic]] [[Liberal Arts]] [[College]] located in [[Loudonville, New York]], in the [[United States]].


==History==
==History==
The groundwork for the first building, Siena Hall, began in March 1938 on the former site of an asparagus farm. By June, Siena received its provisional charter. Siena grew in student body quite quickly. By 1939, Siena added a co-educational evening division, and one year later enrollment was just under 1,000 students. In 1941, Gibbons Hall (the gymnasium) was built as the second building on campus.
The College was founded as "St. Bernardine of Siena College" in 1937 by seven [[Franciscan]] friars on the former site of an asparagus farm. At the time, the school was conducted out of an old farmhouse on the property. The farmhouse also served as the friar's residence. It remained in use at the college until it was latered distroyed in the 1950s.

It was not until 1938 that groundwork for the first building, Siena Hall, began. By June, Siena received its provisional charter. Siena grew in student body quite quickly. By 1939, Siena added a co-educational evening division, and one year later enrollment was just under 1,000 students. In 1941, Gibbons Hall (the gymnasium) was built as the second building on campus.


In 1942, St. Bernadine of Siena College received its permanent charter. Also in 1942, Siena changed its program to meet defense needs for World War II, creating a program to train Navy personnel, as well as regular students.
In 1942, St. Bernadine of Siena College received its permanent charter. Also in 1942, Siena changed its program to meet defense needs for World War II, creating a program to train Navy personnel, as well as regular students.

Revision as of 17:35, 13 December 2008

Siena College
File:Siena Seal Green.jpg
MottoEducation...One Student at a Time; A Liberal-Arts College with a Franciscan and Catholic Tradition
TypePrivate
Established1937
PresidentRev. Kevin J. Mullen, OFM
Undergraduates2900
Postgraduates153
Location,
CampusSuburban, 164 acres (0.66 km²)
AffiliationsRoman Catholic Church
MascotSaints (Saint Bernard Dog)
Websitehttp://www.siena.edu

Siena College is an independent Catholic Liberal Arts College located in Loudonville, New York, in the United States.

History

The College was founded as "St. Bernardine of Siena College" in 1937 by seven Franciscan friars on the former site of an asparagus farm. At the time, the school was conducted out of an old farmhouse on the property. The farmhouse also served as the friar's residence. It remained in use at the college until it was latered distroyed in the 1950s.

It was not until 1938 that groundwork for the first building, Siena Hall, began. By June, Siena received its provisional charter. Siena grew in student body quite quickly. By 1939, Siena added a co-educational evening division, and one year later enrollment was just under 1,000 students. In 1941, Gibbons Hall (the gymnasium) was built as the second building on campus.

In 1942, St. Bernadine of Siena College received its permanent charter. Also in 1942, Siena changed its program to meet defense needs for World War II, creating a program to train Navy personnel, as well as regular students.

After the war, 75% of the student body were ex-servicemen. The college had to rely on the existing structures and rented facilities to handle the large enrollment which hit a peak of 2,752 in 1948. At this time, the school was primarily a commuter school. Two of the buildings created, called "A" and "B", were later destroyed to make way for the current Roger Bacon Science Center.

File:Siena Hall.jpg
Siena Hall, Siena's oldest and most prominent building.

In July 1950, the Friary was completed, and that same year, Siena was granted a US Army ROTC detachment. In 1955, the Dawson Memorial Library was erected, containing stack rooms for 150,000 volumes and reading room accommodations for over 400 students. In 1959, Siena built its first residence hall, Plassman Hall, followed closely by another - Ryan Hall (which are both currently still in use). To provide for resident students, Serra Hall (nicknamed "Saga") was also created, which also is still the school's dining facility. In 1967, the Roger Bacon Science Center opened its doors, on top of where building's "A" and "B" once stood. One year later, Hennepin Hall was added, a 300-person dormitory. Also in 1968, the "quad" was beautified and Siena Hall refurbished. It was in 1968 that women were allowed full-time student status.

In the early 1970s the curriculum was extensively revised and a student voice in policy making was assured by seating a student on each standing committee.

The Alumni Recreation Center, a 55,000 square foot recreational and athletic facility was opened in December 1974. Gibbons Hall, the former gymnasium, was converted into use as Foy campus center (now re-converted into a theater and creative arts center).

In 1981, a new friary was opened to accommodate the Franciscans. The former friary was converted into a residence hall for 200 students - Hines Hall. In 1986, townhouses were erected for 300 upper class residence living. Later that year, floors were added to Hennepin and Plassman Halls, increasing their capacity to 470 and 380 students respectively. To provide for the need of additional classrooms and office space for faculty, Kiernan Hall was constructed between Siena and Hines Halls, and opened at the start of the 1987-88 school year.

The Marcelle Athletic Complex was completed in February 1992 and houses an indoor pool, aerobics/dance/martial arts studio, exercise equipment, racquetball and squash courts, an elevated running track, and full sized basketball, volleyball, and tennis courts. Started in 1993, and completed in 1995, a 300-bed townhouse complex was opened for more upper class students.

Serra Hall

The Standish Library was built on the academic quad and opened for use in the fall of 1999. The old Dawson library was constructed into a new student center: the Sarazen Student Union (named after the inventor of the Sand Wedge and honorary alumnus Gene Sarazen), which opened in April 2001.

The increasing number of resident students led to the construction of another residence hall. In 2001, Padua Hall was dedicated. Named after a Franciscan friar, the four story building houses three students per room. Each room is equipped with its own restroom facilities, including a shower, sink and toilet.

In 2004, the college renovated its main building, Siena Hall. The main academic structure was redone to include state of the art technology and classrooms. It is also home to the Hickey Financial Center, which receives a live feed from the U.S. Stock Market. In 2006, the student dining hall, Serra Hall (right) was completely renovated. The project cost over $5 million.

Most recently, the school began work on constructing a state of the art artificial turf field, which was completed in the Spring of 2007. Also in 2007, the Siena College School of Business received AACSB accreditation, a high honor that continues to prove the strength of the college as a top business school.

Schools and research

The college is composed of three schools of learning: School of Liberal Arts, School of Science and School of Business. Siena students often benefit from the College’s proximity to the City of Albany (Capital of New York State) by acquiring practical internships (and later, careers) in government, the arts, science and business.

The Siena Research Institute [1], founded in 1980, conducts opinion polls that are quoted by the national media including the New York Times and USAToday, and well-known authors such as Betty Boyd Caroli (First Ladies). In 1982, SRI conducted the world's first Ranking of First Ladies. More recently, SRI has conducted studies on a First Woman President and hosted the First Woman President Symposium in March 2005. SRI regularly conducts polls concerning New York's consumer index and polls prior to elections.

Other forms of research are conducted by faculty members of the School of Science.

Extracurricular

File:WVCR.jpg

Siena students participate in the college's regionally popular radio station WVCR-FM.Other activities include: Students In Free Enterprise (SIFE) The Student Events Board (SEB), political activism (Campus Action Club, Democratic Club, and College Republicans), Student Senate, student newspaper (The Promethean), student film society, Gay/Straight Alliance, Habitat for Humanity, Political Science Society, symphony orchestra, choral groups, concert band, dance, drama/theater, art, "The Pendragon" literary magazine, Outing Club, music ensembles, Chemistry and Biology Clubs, Stage III Musical Theater, The Scottish Council of the Students and many other clubs and organizations.

Athletics

File:SienaSaints.png

Siena sponsors 18 sports teams that compete at the NCAA Division I level. Seventeen Saints' sports teams compete in the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC), with field hockey playing in the Northeast Conference. Siena's Baseball team defeated nationally ranked (#5) Tennessee in 2006. Siena's football team was discontinued after the 2003 season due to multiple losing seasons.

Siena offers the lowest pay schedule of any coaching program in Division I. It has been known for assistant coaches receive higher compensation than Siena's head coaches as was pointed out in the Times Union.

In 1989, the Siena men's basketball had a first round NCAA Tournament victory (80-78) over third seed Stanford. On November 17, 2007, Siena again defeated Stanford, this time with a 79-67 victory over the then-20th-ranked Cardinal. The Siena men's basketball team also gained prominence in 2002 with an ESPN-televised opening round NCAA Tournament victory over Alcorn State. The Saints later fell to national champion Maryland before 20,000 fans at the MCI Center in Washington, D.C..

In 2008, the Saints won the Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference (MAAC) championship again, and the automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. Seeded 13th this time, they pulled another upset, this time over Vanderbilt from the SEC, 83-62.

2008 was the team's fourth trip to the "Big Dance". Siena has appeared in five NITs (1988, 1991, 1994, 2000, 2003) and four NCAA tournaments (1989, 1999, 2002, 2008) They reached the 1994 NIT final four, losing to Villanova University in the semifinals before beating Kansas St. in the consolation game.

Siena plays all of their home games at the 17,500 seat Times Union Center in downtown Albany.

Siena is coached by Fran McCaffery, who just completed his third season in Loudonville. Siena is 58-36 under McCaffery in three seasons.

In McCaffery's inaugural season Siena finished the 2005-2006 season at 15-13 in fourth place after being picked to finish unanimously last in the MAAC. Senior captain Antoine "Scoop" Jordan was voted first team all-MAAC.

In 2006-2007 Siena finished 20-12 (tied for third place) reaching the MAAC title game after defeating top seeded Marist 86-78 before losing 83-79 to Niagara. The season was highlighted by the admirable play of underclassmen Kenny Hasbrouck, Edwin Ubiles, Ronald Moore, and Alex Franklin. Hasbrouck won the conference's Rookie of the Year in 2005-2006, while Ubiles shared it in 2006-2007. Senior captain Michael Haddix was voted first team all-MAAC. Hasbrouck also made the second team as a sophomore.

In 2007-2008 Siena won their third MAAC Championship, defeating Rider 74-53 in the championship game. The Saints finished the season with a 23-11 record, and went on to defeat fourth-seeded Vanderbilt in the first round of the NCAA tournament before losing to Villanova 84-72 in the second round. Edwin Ubiles and Kenny Hasbrouck were first team all-MAAC selections, while Alex Franklin made the second team.

Siena College also has a successful womens' golf program that has won the MAAC Conference Championship since the addition of their new coach, Dave Wronowski. The winning individual in last year's MAAC Championship was Siena's Katelynn Mannix, a freshman at the time.

Presidents of Siena College

  • 1937 - 1943 Rev. Cyprian Mensing
  • 1943 - 1952 Rev. Mark Kennedy
  • 1952 - 1955 Rev. Bertrand J. Campbell
  • 1955 - 1964 Rev. Edmund F. Christy
  • 1964 - 1970 Rev. Brian Duffy
  • 1970 - 1976 Rev. Matthew T. Conlin
  • 1976 - 1989 Rev. Hugh F. Hines
  • 1989 - 1996 Rev. William E. McConville
  • 1996 - 2007 Rev. Kevin E. Mackin
  • 2007 - Present Rev. Kevin J. Mullen

Mychal Judge was once an assistant to the president of the college.

Notable Alumni

In the show Law and Order: SVU detective Olivia Benson is a graduate of Siena.

References

U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Siena College 42°43′06″N 73°45′13″W / 42.71833°N 73.75361°W / 42.71833; -73.75361