Campus Overview

Hamilton College is a highly selective liberal arts college of about 2,045 undergraduates in Clinton, New York, known for its open curriculum and an institutional obsession with teaching students to write and speak well. There's no core curriculum — students choose what they study from day one, guided by advisors rather than distribution checklists — which attracts intellectually curious, self-directed students who want to design their own education. If you want a small school where professors know your name, where you'll write constantly across every discipline, and where the culture balances genuine academic intensity with a surprisingly social campus life, Hamilton belongs on your list.


Location & Setting

Clinton is a small village (population around 2,000) in the Mohawk Valley of central New York, about 9 miles southwest of Utica. This is genuinely rural — rolling hills, farmland, and not much commercial development outside the village itself. Clinton has a few restaurants, a coffee shop, and a general store, but nobody would call it a college town in the way Middlebury or Williamstown functions. The campus itself sits on a hilltop with long views across the valley, and it's beautiful in a classic New England-ish way — stone buildings, old trees, and a 1,350-acre campus that feels expansive for a school this size. Utica offers some dining and shopping options, and Syracuse is about an hour east. You're not here for nightlife or urban access — you're here because the campus is the world.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Hamilton is a residential campus through and through — essentially all students live on campus all four years. Housing ranges from traditional dorms to apartment-style options and themed houses for upperclassmen, including substance-free and quiet housing. There's a nice progression where seniors get better picks, and the housing stock is generally well-maintained. A car is helpful for grocery runs and escaping to Utica or Syracuse on weekends, but it's not necessary day-to-day. Campus is walkable, though the hilltop location means you'll get your cardio — there's a real elevation difference between the "dark side" and "light side" of campus (the two halves divided by a central road, a distinction students reference constantly). Winter is the defining weather fact: Clinton gets serious central New York snow, the kind that starts in November and lingers into April. Students adapt — you'll own real boots and a parka — and the cold actually pushes people together indoors, which shapes the social culture.

Campus Culture & Community

Hamilton's social scene has evolved significantly over the past decade-plus. Greek life was eliminated in 1995, making Hamilton one of the earlier selective schools to do so. What replaced it is a social culture built around campus-wide events, themed parties in social spaces, and student organizations. Weekend nights typically involve parties in the campus social spaces (Bundy Dining Hall gets repurposed, various dorms and houses host events) and smaller gatherings. The Annex, a campus pub, is a gathering spot for students of legal age. The culture skews social and friendly rather than cliquish — people describe the community as tight-knit in the way that only happens when 2,000 students share an isolated hilltop. Class Day, a spring tradition, is the big campus-wide blowout. The "dark side" vs. "light side" distinction (named for which side of campus gets more sun) carries mild cultural associations — the dark side historically housed the more artsy, countercultural crowd, the light side the more traditional/preppy set — though students today say the divide matters less than it once did. There's genuine warmth here, and the small size means you'll recognize most faces on campus by sophomore year.

Mission & Values

Hamilton's core institutional identity is built around communication — writing and speaking — more than any single academic discipline. The college's emphasis on clear thinking expressed through clear writing runs across every department, and students take it seriously because professors hold them to it. The advising system matters here more than at schools with rigid distribution requirements, because the open curriculum means your advisor helps you build intellectual coherence rather than just check boxes. Students generally feel known by faculty and staff — at this size, you're not anonymous. There's a community engagement ethos through the Levitt Center for Public Affairs, which funds student projects and internships focused on civic life, though Hamilton's culture is more intellectually engaged than activist.

Student Body

Hamilton draws nationally, with strong representation from the Northeast — New York, Connecticut, Massachusetts, and New Jersey are well-represented, along with a significant contingent from prep schools. The vibe reads as preppy-intellectual: students who own Patagonia fleeces and also get excited about their thesis research. Politically, the campus leans liberal but isn't monolithically so — there's more ideological range than at some peer schools, and the culture generally allows for disagreement. Hamilton has been working to increase socioeconomic and racial diversity, and about half of students receive financial aid, but the campus still reads as predominantly white and upper-middle-class in its default culture. International students make up a meaningful minority. Students tend to be ambitious but not cutthroat — the collaborative atmosphere is one of the things people consistently cite as a reason they chose Hamilton over more intense peers.

Academics

The open curriculum is the headline: no required courses, no distribution requirements. You need 32 credits to graduate, with a major (and optional minor or second major), but how you fill the rest is up to you. In practice, most students explore broadly early on — the freedom tends to produce well-rounded graduates rather than narrow specialists. Writing-intensive courses span every department, and most students complete multiple writing-focused seminars regardless of major. Strong programs include economics (the most popular major), government, mathematics, creative writing, and the sciences — chemistry and biology have strong research infrastructure for a school this size, with students co-authoring published papers with faculty. The English and creative writing programs benefit from Hamilton's communication emphasis and have produced notable writers. Class sizes are small (average around 16 students, with a student-faculty ratio near 9:1), and seminars of 8-12 students are common, especially in upper-level courses. Professors are here to teach — this is not a research university where faculty prioritize lab work over office hours. About 40-45% of students study abroad at some point. Pre-med and pre-law advising are solid, and Hamilton places well into graduate and professional schools relative to its size.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Hamilton competes in Division III as a member of the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC), one of the most competitive D3 conferences in the country. About a third of students play a varsity sport — Hamilton fields around 29 varsity teams — which means athletes are deeply integrated into campus life rather than existing as a separate social class. There's no athletic scholarship money (D3), so everyone is there because they want to play. NESCAC rivalries with Williams, Middlebury, Amherst, and others provide genuine competitive juice, and games draw solid crowds by D3 standards, especially in lacrosse, hockey, and football. The athletic facilities are strong and have seen significant investment, including a turf field complex and renovated fitness center. Being an athlete at Hamilton means balancing real competitive commitment with full academic engagement — coaches understand that academics come first, and the D3 model works well here.

What Else Should You Know

Hamilton's financial aid is need-blind for domestic applicants, and the college meets 100% of demonstrated need — a meaningful distinction that not all liberal arts colleges can claim. The alumni network is loyal and engaged, particularly in finance, law, and media in the Northeast. The Emerson Literary Society and various a cappella groups are cultural institutions. One honest challenge: the isolation can feel real, especially in February when it's been gray and cold for months. Students who thrive here genuinely like the self-contained campus world; students who need urban energy or easy off-campus escapes may struggle. Hamilton's acceptance rate has dropped significantly in recent years (now in the mid-teens), reflecting its rising profile among selective liberal arts colleges. The school punches above its weight in graduate school placement and career outcomes, partly because the writing emphasis produces graduates who communicate unusually well in professional settings.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Missy Mariano: 61 wins in seven seasons (2017–present), six postseason appearances, three all-Americans.
  • Ranked #10 nationally (98.3 ACR), reached NCAA Second Round in 2025; 90% roster from out-of-state.
  • Assistant Emily Conroe: Wake Forest four-year starter, NFHCA Division I Senior Game selection, three NCAA tournament appearances.

About the School

  • Open curriculum: no core requirements, you design your education from day one with faculty advisors.
  • 1,350-acre hilltop campus in rural Mohawk Valley; 100% residential, all four years on campus.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 High
FHC Rank
#10 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
49.6
2025 Record
In-Division: 10-3
Conference
New England Small College Athletic Conference
Coach
Missy Mariano
Trajectory
↓ Declining
Season Results
'25: L 0-1 vs Wesleyan (NCAA Second Round)
'24: L 2-5 vs Middlebury (NESCAC Quarterfinals)
'23: W 2-0 vs William Smith
Program Activity:
Moderate (6 posts/mo)
Academics

Programs

Popular Majors

Social Sciences (32%) (D3 avg: 17%)
Economics (52%)
Political Science and Government (19%)
• International Relations and National Security Studies (14%)
• Sociology (12%)
• Anthropology (3%)
• Archeology (1%)
Biology (13%)
Visual Arts (8%)
Fine and Studio Arts (51%)
Music (26%)
• Drama/Theatre Arts and Stagecraft (17%)
• Dance (3%)
• Film/Video and Photographic Arts (3%)
Foreign Languages (7%)
Mathematics (6%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (2.8%)
Psychology (4.2%)
Biology (13.4%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology
French (6.6%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

Study Abroad
68%

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Baccalaureate: Arts & Sciences

Student Body

Total
2,045
Undergrad
100%
Demographics
56% women
Freshmen
32% in-state
Student:Faculty
9:1

Academics

Admission Rate
12%
SAT Median
1,480
SAT Range
1,410-1,550
ACT Median
33
Retention
96%
Graduation
91%

Events & Clinics

Recruiting Events:
Super Sixty March 2026Mar '26
Super Sixty June 2026Jun '26
Super Sixty December 2025Dec '25
CCG DIII Showcase March 2026Mar '26
Upcoming Clinics:
Jul 25 Hamilton Field Hockey Summer Prospect Clinic

Costs

Total Cost
$80,380
Tuition
$65,740
Room & Board
$16,690

Avg Net Price
$28,314
Net Price ($110k+)
$50,232

Financial Aid

Freshmen Getting Aid
57%

Need-Based Aid

Freshmen w/ Need
57%
Avg % Need Met
100%
Avg Aid Package
$64,435
Grants / Loans
$60,599 / $3,281

Debt at Graduation

Avg Debt
$21,012
Grads w/ Loans
43%
Source: CDS 2024

Location & Weather

Setting
Suburban (Suburb: Midsize)
Nearest City
Syracuse, NY (37 mi)
Major Metro
Rochester, NY (111 mi)

HighLow
January30°14°
April55°34°
July80°60°
October59°41°

Admissions

What Matters in Admissions

Talent/AbilityConsidered
Demonstrated InterestConsidered
Course RigorVery Important
GPAVery Important
Test ScoresConsidered
EssayImportant
RecommendationsImportant
ExtracurricularsConsidered
InterviewConsidered
CharacterImportant

Early Application

ED I Deadline
11/15
ED II Deadline
1/3
ED Accept Rate
29%

Class Size

Under 20
73%
20–29
12%
30–39
10%
40+
4%
Source: CDS 2024

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 12-6 2.3 1.4 +16 4 7 L 0-1 vs Wesleyan (NCAA Second Round at Babson)
2024 7-9 1.3 2.2 -15 1 0 L 2-5 vs Middlebury (NESCAC Quarterfinals)
2023 8-7 1.9 2.4 -8 3 2 W 2-0 vs William Smith
2022 8-8 2.1 2.0 +2 1 1 L 1-5 vs Middlebury (NESCAC Quarterfinals)
2021 10-6 2.0 1.6 +6 2 4 L 1-2 vs Tufts (NESCAC Quarterfinal)
2019 9-8 2.4 1.8 +10 4 4 L 0-3 vs Middlebury (NESCAC Semifinals at Middlebury)
2018 10-6 2.6 1.8 +13 3 2 L 0-2 vs Trinity (NESCAC Quarterfinals)
2017 9-6 3.1 1.7 +22 2 1 L 1-3 vs Trinity (NESCAC Quarterfinal)
2016 12-5 3.1 1.7 +23 4 2 L 2-5 vs Middlebury (NESCAC Semifinals at Tufts)
2015 9-7 2.4 3.2 -12 2 1 L 1-8 vs Middlebury (NESCAC Quarterfinals)
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Missy Mariano mmariano@hamilton.edu View Bio
Nicole Matos nmatos@hamilton.edu View Bio
Emily Conroe econroe@hamilton.edu View Bio

Roster Breakdown

29 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 10% (3 players)
US Out-of-State: 90% (26 players)
Connecticut: 31% (9 players)
Massachusetts: 17% (5 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 7 (24.1%)
Forward/Midfielder: 1 (3.4%)
Midfielder: 10 (34.5%)
Midfielder/Defender: 1 (3.4%)
Defender: 7 (24.1%)
Goalkeeper: 3 (10.3%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 8 players (28%)
Forward: 3
Midfielder: 2
Defender: 2
Goalkeeper: 1
Class of 2026: 6 (21%)
Class of 2028: 7 (24%)
Class of 2029: 8 (28%)

Full Roster (29 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Megan Mazzeo D '27 5-3 Fairfield, Conn. Fairfield Ludlowe HS
2 Lindsey Piper M '27 5-4 Concord, Mass. Concord-Carlisle Regional HS
3 Olivia Waruch F '28 5-5 Accord, N.Y. Rondout Valley HS
4 Eva Bell F/M '29 5-4 Hanover, N.H. Hanover HS
5 Lilly Truchon M '26 5-4 South Burlington, Vt. St. Paul's School [N.H.]
6 Eleanor Cooper M '28 5-5 Chevy Chase, Md. Holton-Arms School
7 Finley Knapp D '29 5-9 Wayland, Mass. Wayland HS
8 Kenna White D/M '28 5-8 Charlotte, N.C. Providence Day School
10 Shaw Huston F '28 5-10 Berwyn, Pa. The Episcopal Academy
11 Brooke Marx D '26 5-4 Denver, Colo. The Taft School [Conn.]
12 Leah Rose-Seiden M '28 5-6 Princeton, N.J. Princeton HS
13 Lily LaVigne M '27 5-3 New Milford, Conn. Canterbury School
14 Becky Felker F/D '26 5-4 Bethesda, Md. Stone Ridge School of the Sacred Heart
15 Isabelle Nahon D '27 5-3 Westport, Conn. Staples HS
16 Sammy Higgins M '26 5-5 Weston, Mass. Noble and Greenough School
17 Brighton McMahon F '29 5-2 Hebron, Conn. The Taft School
19 Evelyn Butorac F '27 5-6 New Fairfield, Conn. New Fairfield HS
20 Katie Pinto M '29 5-7 Chevy Chase, Md. National Cathedral School [D.C.]
21 Morgan Clarke D '28 5-8 Kent, Conn. Kent School
22 Alexis Glasofer M '29 5-3 Westfield, N.J. The Pingry School
24 Alden Duserick F '27 5-2 Pittsford, N.Y. Pittsford Mendon HS
25 Rose Idone M '29 5-2 Ridgefield, Conn. Ridgefield HS
26 Brooke Bilodeau F '27 5-7 Darien, Conn. Darien HS
28 Claire Tratnyek M '26 5-2 Short Hills, N.J. Kent Place School
29 Claire Sheehan D '29 5-9 Needham, Mass. Milton Academy
30 Nina Byrne D '29 5-5 Mount Kisco, N.Y. Horace Greeley HS
44 Kelly Janssen GK '28 5-7 Greenwich, Conn. Greenwich HS
88 Abby Griffin GK '26 5-4 Shrewsbury, Mass. St. Mark's School
99 Reilly Loughman GK '27 5-6 Norwich, Vt. Hanover HS [N.H.]