Centre College is one of those small liberal arts schools that punches so far above its weight that people outside the South often haven't heard of it — and people who know it tend to be a little evangelical about it. With roughly 1,346 undergraduates on a historic campus in small-town Kentucky, Centre operates on the premise that a tiny, rigorous school can deliver an experience that rivals the elite New England liberal arts colleges, and it largely delivers. The school backs this up with what it calls the "Centre Commitment" — a guarantee that every student will have a study abroad experience, an internship or research opportunity, and graduate in four years. If you want a place where professors will know your name by the second week and you'll be pushed hard academically while still having a genuine college social life, Centre belongs on your list.
Location & Setting
Danville is a small town of about 17,000 in the Bluegrass region of central Kentucky, roughly 35 miles southwest of Lexington. This is definitively a college town — not a city with a college in it. The campus sits near Danville's compact downtown, which has a town square with a handful of restaurants, coffee shops, and local businesses. It's pleasant and walkable but limited; you're not going to find a thriving nightlife or a huge variety of dining options. The surrounding countryside is genuinely beautiful — rolling horse farms, stone fences, and the kind of green pastoral landscape Kentucky is famous for. Lexington is the nearest real city and offers more shopping, restaurants, and airport access. Louisville is about 80 miles north. If you need constant urban stimulation, Danville will feel isolating. If you like a tight-knit campus where the school is the center of gravity, it works.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Centre is emphatically a residential campus. About 95% of students live on campus all four years, and housing is guaranteed. First-years live in traditional residence halls, and upperclassmen move into suites, apartments, or Greek housing — but almost everyone stays on campus. The physical campus is compact and entirely walkable; you can cross it in about ten minutes. A car is nice for weekend trips to Lexington or exploring the Bluegrass area, but it's not necessary for daily life. Winters are moderate by northern standards — cold and occasionally icy but not brutal. Fall is spectacular in this part of Kentucky, and springs come early. The climate supports a reasonably active outdoor culture, with hiking and trail running in the nearby Knobs region.
Campus Culture & Community
Greek life is a major part of Centre's social ecosystem — roughly 50-60% of students join a fraternity or sorority, making it one of the dominant social structures on campus. On weekend nights, Greek events are often where the action is. That said, Centre is small enough that the social lines are more porous than at a large state school; independents aren't shut out, and friend groups tend to cut across affiliations. The Student Activities Council programs events, and because there's not much to do in Danville itself, campus events get solid turnout. Centre has genuine traditions that students buy into — Homecoming is a big deal, and "Running of the Flame" (a torch relay tied to opening convocation) is one of those rituals that sounds corny until you're part of it. School spirit exists in a D3 way: people show up for rivalry games and care about their teams, but it's not SEC-level intensity. The culture skews friendly and community-oriented; at a school this small, you can't really be anonymous, which is either a feature or a bug depending on your personality.
Mission & Values
Centre was founded in 1819 with ties to the Presbyterian Church, but today the religious affiliation is largely historical. There's a chapel on campus and an optional chaplaincy program, but no required religion courses and no dry-campus policy stemming from religious doctrine. Students of all faiths or no faith will feel comfortable. The school's actual operating ethos is centered on the liberal arts ideal — developing well-rounded thinkers, not just specialists. The Centre Commitment reflects a genuine institutional investment in the whole student: the study abroad guarantee, the internship guarantee, and the four-year graduation guarantee signal that the school sees itself as responsible for outcomes, not just providing access. Faculty-student relationships are close, and the advising culture is strong. Students generally report feeling known and supported as individuals, which is one of Centre's clearest advantages over larger schools.
Student Body
Centre draws heavily from Kentucky and the surrounding region — Tennessee, Ohio, Indiana, Georgia — though it's been expanding its geographic reach. The campus leans somewhat preppy and Southern in its dominant aesthetic, though there's range within that. Politically, the student body skews moderate-to-conservative relative to coastal liberal arts schools, reflecting its geography, but it's not monolithic. Students tend to be achievement-oriented, involved in multiple activities, and genuinely interested in ideas — the kind of people who came to a small school on purpose. Racial and socioeconomic diversity has been an area of intentional growth; Centre has invested in expanding access, though it remains a predominantly white campus. International students make up a small but growing percentage. The overall vibe: smart, social, engaged, and a little traditional.
Academics
Centre's academic reputation is anchored in the sciences, economics, and politics. The chemistry and biochemistry programs are notably strong — the school produces a disproportionate number of students who go on to medical school and PhD programs, and the acceptance rates to graduate and professional schools are genuinely impressive for a school of this size. Economics is popular and well-regarded, and the government/politics programs benefit from Centre's history (the school has produced two U.S. Vice Presidents and a Supreme Court Chief Justice, which it will remind you about). The college runs on a 4-1-4 calendar: fall semester, a January "CentreTerm," and spring semester. CentreTerm is a three-week intensive term where students take a single course, often experiential — travel courses, studio arts, unusual electives. It's one of Centre's most distinctive features and a major vehicle for study abroad. Speaking of which, Centre sends roughly 85% of its students abroad at some point, which is among the highest rates in the country. Class sizes are small — the student-faculty ratio is about 11:1, and average class size hovers around 17. Professors are teaching-focused and accessible; office hours aren't perfunctory, and undergraduate research opportunities are real, not just advertised. The academic culture is rigorous but collaborative. Students work hard, but there's more mutual support than cutthroat competition.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Centre competes in NCAA Division III as a member of the Collegiate Field Hockey Conference for field hockey and the Southern Athletic Association for most other sports, fielding around 22 varsity teams. At a school of 1,346, that means a significant percentage of the student body is a varsity athlete — roughly a third. Athletes are well-integrated into campus life; there's no separate jock culture because the school is too small for rigid social silos. Football draws the best crowds, especially for rivalry games, and soccer and lacrosse have solid followings. The D3 model means student-athletes are genuinely students first — no athletic scholarships, no massive time commitments that crowd out academics or study abroad. For a field hockey recruit, this means you can fully participate in the academic life Centre offers while competing at a meaningful level.
What Else Should You Know
Centre's financial aid is aggressive for a school of its profile — it meets a high percentage of demonstrated need and offers merit scholarships that can make attendance significantly more affordable than sticker price. The endowment per student is strong relative to peers. The 2012 Vice Presidential debate (Biden vs. Ryan) was held at Centre, which was a massive moment for the school's national visibility. The alumni network, while small, is loyal and well-connected, particularly in Kentucky, the Southeast, and in law and medicine. The honest trade-off: Danville's size means the campus can feel insular, and the Greek-heavy social scene isn't for everyone. If you want anonymity, big-city access, or a large and diverse social ecosystem, Centre will feel limiting. But if you want a place that will invest deeply in you as a person and a student, where you'll build lifelong relationships with professors and classmates, and where you'll graduate genuinely prepared — Centre is the real thing.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 43° | 23° |
| April | 68° | 44° |
| July | 86° | 65° |
| October | 69° | 45° |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 7-9 | 2.2 | 1.8 | +7 | 7 | 3 | L 2-3 vs Sewanee (CFHC Quarterfinals at Marian) |
| 2024 | 8-11 | 1.5 | 2.1 | -11 | 7 | 2 | L 0-6 vs Mary Washington (Collegiate FHC Semifinals at Sewanee) |
| 2023 | 11-9 | 2.0 | 1.8 | +5 | 4 | 2 | L 1-3 vs Rhodes (SAA Final) |
| 2022 | 10-7 | 2.3 | 1.8 | +9 | 5 | 0 | W 2-1 vs Rhodes (SAA Final) |
| 2021 | 15-4 | 2.8 | 0.8 | +38 | 9 | 4 | L 0-1 vs Bowdoin (NCAA Second Round at Hopkins) |
| 2019 | 18-1 | 4.6 | 0.6 | +76 | 10 | 2 | L 1-2 vs Lynchburg (NCAA First round) |
| 2018 | 12-4 | 4.2 | 1.0 | +52 | 7 | 1 | L 1-2 (3 OT) vs Rhodes (SAA Final at Hendrix) |
| 2017 | 17-5 | 3.4 | 1.1 | +50 | 5 | 1 | L 0-2 vs TCNJ (NCAA Quarterfinals) |
| 2016 | 14-4 | 4.1 | 0.9 | +56 | 8 | 3 | L 0-3 vs Rhodes (SAA Final) |
| 2015 | 10-6 | 2.6 | 1.1 | +23 | 5 | 3 | L 2-3 (2 OT) vs Rhodes (SAA Final) |
| Name | Position | Contact | Bio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grace Goodbarn | Head Coach | grace.goodbarn@centre.edu | View Bio |
| Meghan Speth 24 | Assistant Coach | meghan.speth@centre.edu | View Bio |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 4 | Chloe Colavita-Jones | M/D | Fr. | - | Newfield, N.J. | Delsea |
| 6 | Philine Bolt | D | So. | - | South Holland, Netherlands | International School |
| 7 | Hannah Lange | D | Jr. | - | Louisville, KY | Sacred Heart |
| 8 | Jen Taylor | M/D | Fr. | - | Louisville, Ky. | Ballard |
| 9 | Halle Rigden | M/D | Sr. | - | Oak Park, Ill. | River Forest |
| 10 | Tori Drepaul | M/D | So. | - | Louisville, Ky. | Dupont Manual |
| 12 | Hannah Miller | F | Jr. | - | Monument, Colo. | Palmer Ridge |
| 13 | Stella Regala | M | Fr. | - | Louisville, KY | Atherton HS |
| 15 | Emily Ritchie | F | Sr. | - | Charlotte, N.C. | Providence Day |
| 16 | Emma Roessler | M/D | Fr. | - | Oldwick, N.J. | Voorhees |
| 22 | Ashley Hamilton | D | So. | - | Louisville, Ky. | Assumption |
| 23 | Claire Martin | F | Sr. | - | Louisville, Ky. | Ballard |
| 24 | Caroline Toler | D | Jr. | - | Louisville, KY | DuPont Manual |
| 27 | Taylor Fuqua | F/M | So. | - | Louisville, Ky. | Ballard |
| 28 | Olivia Vonderheide | F | Fr. | - | Louisville, Ky. | Highlands Latin |
| 35 | Eliza Hensley | GK | Fr. | - | Louisville, Ky. | Sacred Heart |
| 55 | Addie Sheridan | GK | Fr. | - | La Plata, Md. | La Plata |