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SG-014 Swedenborgian college · Ohio 2020

Urbana University — Johnny Appleseed’s New Church College, Closed by a Branch Office Decision

Lifespan
1850–2020 · 170 yrs
Peak Enrollment
~1,800 (annual, latter years)
Killed By
enrollment decline
Status
Closed

Summary

Urbana University, in the small city of Urbana, Ohio, founded in 1850 by followers of the Swedish theologian Emanuel Swedenborg, announced in April 2020 that it would cease operations at the end of that spring semester. It was 170 years old. It did not close as an independent institution making its own last decision; it closed as a line item — a branch campus of Franklin University, a Columbus institution that had acquired Urbana's assets in 2014 and folded it into its own accreditation as a branch campus in 2017. When Franklin's leadership looked at a campus that had been losing money and students for years and then watched the coronavirus pandemic arrive, the math resolved itself, and the oldest Swedenborgian college in America was switched off by a board that sat seventy miles away.

The institution that closed had begun as one of the more unusual experiments in nineteenth-century American higher education. The New Church — the Swedenborgian denomination, also called the Church of the New Jerusalem — chartered Urbana College in 1850 to build a school around Swedenborg's theology and philosophy, and it became, after Oberlin, the second institution of higher learning in Ohio to admit women alongside men. Its founding folklore is the kind most colleges would invent if they could: the land was secured with the help of John Chapman, the Swedenborgian missionary the country remembers as Johnny Appleseed, who persuaded a friend to donate the acreage southwest of town. The college suspended operations during the Civil War, reopened, ran for a century as a small junior college, became a four-year institution in 1968, and took the name Urbana University in 1975.

By the time it closed, the religious mission was a heritage line in the catalog rather than a living subsidy, and the college was simply a small, tuition-dependent institution in a part of the country with too many of them. Of the roughly 1,254 students enrolled at the end, only about a quarter — some 350 residential and commuter students — were the traditional undergraduates a campus closure most disrupts; the majority were in off-site and online programs that Franklin could continue without the Urbana campus at all. That fact is the whole diagnosis. A college whose remaining value to its owner lived in programs that did not require the campus did not need the campus. About 111 employees lost their jobs.

Timeline

1849
The land
Local Swedenborgian John Chapman — Johnny Appleseed — helps persuade landowner John H. James to donate acreage southwest of Urbana for a New Church college.
1850
Founded
Urbana College is chartered by members of the Swedenborgian (New Jerusalem) Church to build an institution around Emanuel Swedenborg's theology; it is the second college in Ohio to admit women.
1861–1866
The Civil War pause
The young college suspends operations during the war, then reopens to resume as a small denominational school.
1900s–1960s
A century as a junior college
Urbana runs for decades as a modest two-year institution serving the surrounding county.
1968
Four-year college
Urbana transitions to a four-year baccalaureate institution.
1975
Urbana University
The college renames itself a university and is accredited through the North Central Association.
2013–2020
NCAA Division II
The Blue Knights field 19 varsity teams, competing largely in the Mountain East Conference.
April 2014
Acquired by Franklin
Facing financial strain, Urbana's assets are purchased by Franklin University of Columbus, Ohio.
August 2017
A branch campus
Franklin folds Urbana into its own accreditation as a branch campus; Urbana ceases to be an independent institution.
April 21–22, 2020
The closure
Franklin announces Urbana will cease operations after the spring 2020 semester, citing low enrollment and the strain of the coronavirus pandemic; ~1,254 students and 111 employees are affected.
Spring–Summer 2020
The wind-down
Off-site and online students are transitioned to Franklin; residential students transfer or finish online; the campus and athletics shut down; academic records move to Columbus.

A College Built on a Vision

Urbana belonged to a vanishing species: the denominational college founded not to capture a market but to embody an idea. The New Church, the small American body that took its theology from the eighteenth-century Swedish scientist and mystic Emanuel Swedenborg, wanted a college that would teach in the light of his writings, and in 1850 it built one on donated land in west-central Ohio. The donation came through the agency of John Chapman, the itinerant nurseryman and Swedenborgian evangelist whom American memory has flattened into the cartoon of Johnny Appleseed; the man who scattered orchards across the frontier also helped seed a college. From the start Urbana carried two marks of an unusually progressive founding — a coeducational charter that made it the second college in Ohio to admit women, and a curriculum animated by a coherent religious philosophy rather than mere sectarian custody.

For most of its first century, Urbana was small and stayed small. It paused during the Civil War, reopened, and settled into the unglamorous role of a regional junior college, the kind of institution that gave the children of a farming county their first two years of higher education close to home. It became a four-year college only in 1968 and a "university" in 1975, growing its programs and its athletics — eventually a full slate of NCAA Division II teams — without ever growing the endowment that would have made those ambitions safe. The Swedenborgian vision that had founded it receded, over the decades, into a heritage detail, and what remained was a familiar American thing: a tiny, tuition-dependent college in a state with far more colleges than its demography could sustain.

The Branch Campus Years

By the early 2010s Urbana was in the trouble that would eventually claim dozens of institutions like it: too few students, too little reserve, and a balance sheet that depended on filling beds it could no longer fill. In April 2014 the answer arrived from Columbus. Franklin University, a private nonprofit built around adult and online education, purchased Urbana's assets, and in August 2017 it took the further, decisive step of folding Urbana into its own accreditation as a branch campus. The arrangement looked like a rescue, and in a narrow sense it was — it kept the lights on for six more years. But it also changed the fundamental fact of the institution. Urbana University was no longer an institution. It was a campus belonging to one.

That distinction is the quiet hinge of the whole story. An independent college fights for its own survival because its survival is the entire point of its board; a branch campus survives only so long as it serves the strategy of the parent, and the parent has other campuses and a different mission. Franklin's strength was online and adult programming delivered at scale, and that strength did not require Urbana's grounds in west-central Ohio. By the end, the numbers made the logic plain: of roughly 1,254 students attached to the Urbana campus, about three-quarters were in off-site or online programs — College Credit Plus, post-baccalaureate education, an MBA track, a corrections-education program — that Franklin could carry forward without the campus existing. Only about 350 were the residential and commuter students for whom Urbana, the place, was the college. The asset that justified the campus had quietly migrated off it.

A Decision Made Elsewhere

When the coronavirus pandemic arrived in the spring of 2020 it did not so much kill Urbana as relieve Franklin of any remaining reason to keep it. The campus had been losing money and students for years; COVID-19 added, in the closure announcement's own framing, a level of stress and uncertainty that made the operation impossible to sustain. On April 21 and 22, 2020, Franklin announced that the Urbana University branch campus would cease operations at the end of the spring term. There was no fight, because there was no longer an institution with standing to fight — only a parent rationalizing its real estate.

The wind-down was, by the standards of the closure era, relatively orderly, and that orderliness is itself a comment on what Urbana had become. The three-quarters of students in distributed programs were simply transitioned into Franklin's own offerings, their education continuing under a different brand. The residential and commuter students finished the spring online and were offered transfer to Franklin in Columbus or help going elsewhere. Athletics ended; 111 employees lost their jobs, a handful absorbed by Franklin and most sent off with severance. Academic records went to Columbus, where a 170-year-old college now survives as a registrar's file. The Swedenborgian college that Johnny Appleseed had helped to plant, the second in Ohio to teach women, ended not in a dramatic insolvency but in a branch-office decision — closed the way a company closes an underperforming location, because by 2020 that, administratively, is exactly what it was.

The Five Factors

01
The lost denominational mission left only the market
Urbana was founded to embody a theology, but by its last decades the New Church no longer subsidized it and the Swedenborgian purpose was a heritage line, not a living source of funds. Stripped of the mission that once justified its existence regardless of market, it was left to compete as a small tuition-dependent college — the weakest possible position in a saturated state.
02
Acquisition is survival on someone else's terms
Franklin's 2014 purchase and 2017 branch-campus absorption kept Urbana alive, but it transferred the decision about Urbana's future to a board whose mission was its own. A rescued institution that becomes a subsidiary survives only as long as it serves the rescuer's strategy.
03
When the value lives off-campus, the campus is expendable
Three-quarters of Urbana's final enrollment sat in online and off-site programs Franklin could run without the grounds. Once the revenue no longer required the place, the place became pure cost — and the residential college, the part that needed the campus, was the minority the closure could most easily sacrifice.
04
The demographic and geographic glut had no room for the marginal college
Ohio, like much of the Midwest and Northeast, carried more small colleges than its declining pool of traditional students could fill. A tiny, lightly endowed institution in a small city was precisely the kind of marginal campus the consolidation was always going to reach.
05
COVID-19 was the accelerant, not the cause
The decline ran for years; the pandemic merely removed the last reason to defer a decision already implied by the numbers. Blaming the virus is true and incomplete — it set the date, not the trajectory.

Aftermath

Because most of Urbana's students were in distributed programs, the human disruption was narrower than the raw enrollment figure suggests, and most of those students continued their education inside Franklin with little interruption. The residential and commuter undergraduates — the few hundred for whom Urbana was a place and a community — bore the real loss, scattering to transfers in the middle of a pandemic that was upending every campus at once. The 111 employees who lost their jobs lost them in a small Ohio city that had counted the college among its anchors; the institution had been estimated to generate tens of millions of dollars a year in local economic impact, and a town of Urbana's size does not easily replace a 170-year-old college.

The campus and its records went to Columbus, and Urbana University took its place on the lengthening list of small American colleges that closed between 2018 and 2024. Its particular lesson is structural rather than scandalous: there was no fraud here, no looted endowment, no board that gambled and lost. There was only a college that lost its founding subsidy, sold itself into survival as a branch of a larger institution, and discovered that survival on those terms lasts exactly as long as the larger institution finds it useful. The New Church college that Johnny Appleseed helped to found endured for 170 years and ended as a strategic redundancy.

Lessons

  1. A denominational college that loses its church subsidy must build a market identity or an endowment before the subsidy ends — once the founding mission no longer pays the bills, a small religious college is just another tuition-dependent institution, and a weak one.
  2. Acquisition is not salvation: when a struggling college becomes a branch campus of another, it trades independent survival for survival at the parent's discretion, and the parent's mission, not the campus's history, will decide its end.
  3. Watch where the revenue actually lives — when a campus's enrollment migrates into online and off-site programs that do not need the grounds, the grounds become a cost center, and the residential college is the first thing a rational owner cuts.
  4. For students choosing a small college, ask whether it is independent or a subsidiary, and whether its programs require the campus at all; the answer predicts how, and how abruptly, the place can disappear.
  5. A pandemic or recession does not create a closure so much as license one already implied by years of decline; trustees and towns should read the trajectory, not wait for the accelerant.

References