Campus Overview

Hobart and William Smith Colleges is one of the last coordinate college systems in the country — Hobart (founded 1822, for men) and William Smith (founded 1908, for women) share a single campus, faculty, and curriculum but maintain separate deans, traditions, and student governments. With 1,606 undergraduates on the shore of Seneca Lake in New York's Finger Lakes, this is a place where the setting does real work: the lake is right there, integrated into academic programs, sailing, and daily life in a way that goes beyond scenery. HWS draws students who want a small, residential liberal arts experience with genuine faculty relationships and enough institutional quirkiness — the coordinate structure, the lake, the Finger Lakes identity — to feel like more than just another small college.


Location & Setting Geneva sits at the northern tip of Seneca Lake, the deepest of the Finger Lakes, about an hour southeast of Rochester and four-plus hours from New York City. It's a small city of around 13,000 — not a college town built around the school, but a real community with its own economic life, some of it tied to the Finger Lakes wine industry that's grown significantly over the past two decades. The main campus runs right down to the lakeshore, and that waterfront access is genuinely unusual for a liberal arts college. Downtown Geneva (South Main Street) is walkable from campus and has enough restaurants, coffee shops, and a revived Smith Opera House to give students options without pretending it's a city. The Finger Lakes region offers serious outdoor recreation — gorges, state parks, wine trails, cross-country skiing — but you have to want it. This isn't a place where entertainment comes to you.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around HWS is thoroughly residential. The college requires students to live on campus for at least their first three years, and roughly 90% of students live in college housing. Options range from traditional dorms to theme houses and small residences. Some seniors move to apartments or houses in Geneva, but the default is campus life. The campus itself is compact and walkable — you can get from one end to the other in about ten minutes. A car is helpful for exploring the Finger Lakes, grocery runs, or escaping to Rochester, but it's not necessary for daily life. The weather shapes everything: Finger Lakes winters are long, gray, and snowy, with lake-effect weather adding an extra edge. Students who thrive here either embrace winter or find ways to cope with it. Fall is spectacular, and spring on the lake is worth the wait, but be honest with yourself about five months of cold.

Campus Culture & Community The coordinate structure sounds like a historical curiosity, but it does create a slightly different social dynamic than a typical coed school. There are separate orientations, separate student government bodies, and some traditions tied to Hobart or William Smith specifically — Charter Day for each college, for instance. In practice, daily life is fully integrated: same classes, same dining halls, same friend groups. Greek life exists at Hobart (roughly a quarter of men join fraternities) and sororities were introduced more recently at William Smith. Fraternities have a visible social presence, especially on weekends, but they don't dominate the way they might at a larger school. Non-Greek students find social life through sports teams, club activities, house parties, and the campus programming board. The social scene skews toward house parties and small gatherings over a big bar or club scene — Geneva doesn't have a college nightlife strip. The community is small enough that you'll see the same people regularly, which builds closeness but can also feel claustrophobic if you're someone who needs anonymity. School spirit exists more around traditions and identity than around big athletic events.

Mission & Values HWS emphasizes what it calls "preparing students to lead lives of consequence," and it shows up most concretely in a strong service-learning and community engagement infrastructure. The Center for Community Engagement and Service Learning is active, and many courses include community-based components in Geneva and the surrounding region. The coordinate structure carries an implicit commitment to thinking about gender and identity that's baked into the institution's DNA, even when students don't think about it daily. Professors know students by name — at this size, there's no hiding — and the advising relationships tend to be genuinely personal. The school invests in the whole-person development model common to residential liberal arts colleges, and students generally report feeling known and supported.

Student Body HWS draws heavily from the Northeast — New York, New England, New Jersey, and the mid-Atlantic states make up the core. There's a noticeable prep school pipeline, and the vibe leans preppy-outdoorsy: Patagonia fleeces, dock shoes, and students who grew up playing lacrosse or field hockey. The campus has historically been less racially diverse than its peer institutions, though the college has been working to change this. International students make up a meaningful slice. Politically, the campus skews moderate to liberal, though it's not particularly activist compared to some liberal arts peers. Students tend to be friendly and social, with a "work hard, play hard" energy that shows up in the balance between academics and lake life.

Academics HWS runs on a two-semester calendar with a 10:1 student-faculty ratio and average class sizes around 16. The curriculum requires distribution across eight disciplinary "goals" but gives students flexibility within those requirements. Environmental studies is the flagship — the Finger Lakes location makes it a living laboratory, and the program is one of the oldest undergraduate environmental studies programs in the country. Media and society, writing and rhetoric, and architecture (an unusual offering for a school this size) are genuinely distinctive. The sciences are solid, with good pre-med advising and access to undergraduate research. Economics and political science are popular. Languages benefit from what may be HWS's most impressive statistic: over 60% of students study abroad, one of the highest rates in the country, supported by an extensive network of college-sponsored programs. Faculty are teaching-focused and accessible — office hours aren't performative, and many professors live in Geneva, which blurs the line between academic and social mentorship. The academic culture is more collaborative than cutthroat, though rigor varies by department.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture HWS competes in the Liberty League with 23 varsity sports across the two colleges. Sailing is the headliner — the program has a national reputation and the Seneca Lake location is a genuine competitive advantage. Lacrosse has historically been strong at Hobart (men's lacrosse won the first-ever NCAA D3 championship in 1980 and has multiple titles). Field hockey competes in the Liberty League against schools like RPI, Vassar, St. Lawrence, and Rochester. Student-athletes make up a large percentage of the student body — typical of D3 liberal arts schools — so athletics is woven into the social fabric rather than existing as a separate subculture. There are no athletic scholarships (D3), which means athletes are there for the academics and the love of the game. Gameday culture isn't a defining campus event the way it might be at a D1 school, but athletes are visible and respected.

What Else Should You Know The Finger Lakes setting is a genuine differentiator — not just aesthetically but practically. Access to the lake for sailing, kayaking, and recreation is a daily reality, and the wine country tourism has lifted Geneva's food and cultural scene noticeably over the past decade. On the flip side, Geneva is still a small, economically mixed community, and the contrast between the manicured campus and parts of the surrounding town is real. Financial aid is important here — HWS meets a significant portion of demonstrated need, and merit scholarships can make it more affordable than the sticker price suggests, but families should run the net price calculator carefully. The college has navigated some difficult institutional moments around campus safety and Title IX in the past decade, and prospective students should feel empowered to ask direct questions about campus culture during visits. Finally, the coordinate structure creates one genuinely practical quirk: you'll see both "Hobart and William Smith" and "HWS" used, and the school's identity is a little harder to explain in a sentence than "I go to Middlebury" — but students tend to embrace the distinctiveness rather than find it cumbersome.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Kelly Blackhurst set single-season wins record at Roger Williams; now in fourth season building William Smith program.
  • Rising trajectory: ranked #42 of 163 D3 programs, advancing to 2025 Liberty League Semifinals with 9-7 record.
  • Assistant Coach Ami Cammarota is two-time NFHCA All-Academic, NCAA postgraduate scholar, played 84 games for Herons.

About the School

  • Coordinate college system: Hobart and William Smith share one campus but maintain separate deans, traditions, student governments.
  • Main campus sits on Seneca Lake shoreline—the deepest Finger Lake—integrated into academics, sailing, and residential life daily.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 High
FHC Rank
#42 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
38.9
2025 Record
In-Division: 9-7
Conference
Liberty League
Coach
Sophie Riskie '07
Trajectory
↑ Rising
Season Results
'25: L 1-2 vs Vassar (Liberty League Semifinals)
'24: L 0-1 vs Skidmore (Liberty League Quarterfinal)
'23: L 0-7 vs Middlebury (NCAA Second Round)

Programs

Popular Majors

Social Sciences (23%)
Economics (49%)
Political Science and Government (19%)
• International Relations and National Security Studies (12%)
• Sociology (11%)
• Anthropology (5%)
• Social Sciences, General (3%)
Psychology (10%)
Communication (9%)
Biology (8%)
Architecture (8%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (6.7%)
Psychology (9.5%)
Biology (8.1%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology
French (2.2%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

Study Abroad
76%

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Baccalaureate: Arts & Sciences

Student Body

Total
1,657
Undergrad
97%
Demographics
51% women
Freshmen
42% in-state
Student:Faculty
10:1

Academics

Admission Rate
57%
SAT Median
1,290
SAT Range
1,220-1,360
ACT Median
29
Retention
89%
Graduation
73%

Events & Clinics

Recruiting Events:
Disney Showcase 2026
CCG DIII Showcase March 2026Mar '26
Upcoming Clinics:
May 2 Spring Clinic

Costs

Total Cost
$80,635
Tuition
$63,268
Room & Board
$17,334

Avg Net Price
$31,057
Net Price ($110k+)
$41,860

Financial Aid

Freshmen Getting Aid
99%

Merit Aid

Avg Merit Grant
$33,592
Freshmen Merit Only
30%

Need-Based Aid

Freshmen w/ Need
69%
Avg % Need Met
88%
% Need Fully Met
32%
Avg Aid Package
$54,912

Debt at Graduation

Avg Debt
$31,113
Source: CDS 2024

Location & Weather

Setting
Town (Town: Distant)
Nearest City
Rochester, NY (38 mi)
Major Metro
Buffalo, NY (96 mi)

HighLow
January30°16°
April54°35°
July79°61°
October58°41°

Admissions

What Matters in Admissions

Talent/AbilityImportant
Demonstrated InterestConsidered
Course RigorConsidered
GPAVery Important
Test ScoresConsidered
EssayImportant
RecommendationsImportant
ExtracurricularsConsidered
InterviewVery Important
CharacterConsidered

Early Application

ED I Deadline
11/15
ED II Deadline
1/15
EA Deadline
11/15

Class Size

Under 20
67%
20–29
28%
30–39
4%
40+
1%
Source: CDS 2024

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 12-9 2.2 2.0 +3 4 7 L 1-2 vs Vassar (Liberty League Semifinals)
2024 9-10 2.2 1.8 +8 3 3 L 0-1 vs Skidmore (Liberty League Quarterfinal)
2023 14-8 2.0 1.4 +13 9 4 L 0-7 vs Middlebury (NCAA Second Round at Messiah)
2022 17-5 2.7 1.0 +38 10 4 L 0-1 vs Johns Hopkins (NCAA Second Round at Babson)
2021 6-9 1.8 2.7 -13 1 2 W 2-1 (2 OT) vs Vassar
2019 5-11 1.2 2.5 -20 1 1 L 1-6 vs Messiah
2018 5-11 1.4 2.9 -23 0 2 L 0-3 vs Messiah
2017 12-6 3.2 1.8 +26 3 0 L 0-4 vs Rochester (LIberty League Semifinals)
2016 12-6 3.7 1.6 +37 5 1 L 1-2 vs Rochester (Liberty League Semifinals)
2015 18-3 3.7 1.5 +45 5 1 L 0-3 vs Middlebury (NCAA Quarterfinals)
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Sophie Riskie 07 Head Coach sriskie@hws.edu View Bio
Katie Lass Assistant Coach LASS@hws.edu View Bio
Kelly Blackhurst Assistant Coach View Bio
Ami Cammarota 00 Assistant Coach View Bio
Bella Diamandis Field Hockey Operations Assistant View Bio
Jeff Anderson Faculty-Athletic Fellow
Kristen Welsh Faculty-Athletic Fellow
Richie Titus Assistant Athletic Trainer
Izzy Callen Assistant Coach
Zack Koons Assistant Director of Athletic Communications
Nick Prince Assistant Equipment Manager

Roster Breakdown

24 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 42% (10 players)
US Out-of-State: 50% (12 players)
International: 8% (2 players)
New York: 42% (10 players)
Massachusetts: 21% (5 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 5 (20.8%)
Forward/Midfielder: 4 (16.7%)
Midfielder: 7 (29.2%)
Midfielder/Defender: 1 (4.2%)
Defender: 5 (20.8%)
Goalkeeper: 2 (8.3%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 4 players (17%)
Midfielder: 2
Midfielder/Defender: 1
Defender: 1
Class of 2026: 7 (29%)
Class of 2028: 9 (38%)
Class of 2029: 4 (17%)

Full Roster (24 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Elle Oberfield M JR - University Heights, Ohio Hawken
2 Ava Vecchione D JR - Belle Mead, N.J. The Pennington School
3 Leah Griffith M/D JR - Rochester, N.Y. East Rochester
4 Zoe Ugarteche M SR - Buenos Aires, Argentina Colegio Alas
5 Eliza Freeland F SO - Buffalo, N.Y. West Seneca
6 Anneliese Oetsen F SR - Grafton, Mass. Grafton
7 Kristen Newman F/M SR - Hunt Valley, Md. St. Timothy's School
9 Ana Dios Vidal M SO - Madrid, Spain The Hun School of Princeton
10 Rebecca Mantione F/M GR - Baldwinsville, N.Y. C.W. Baker
11 Kylee Knuschke M JR - Red Hook, N.Y. Red Hook
12 Mia Batchelder F SO - Andover, Mass. Andover
13 Hadley Harbert D SO - Collegeville, Pa. Germantown Academy
14 Taryn Hitt M FY - Whitney Point, N.Y. Whitney Point
15 Sophia Weene M SO - Wellesley, Mass. Wellesley
16 Delaney Williams D SR - Vestal, N.Y. Vestal
18 Josie Elion D FY - Annapolis, Md. Severn School
20 Grace McCormick M SO - Orchard Park, N.Y. Orchard Park
22 Lily Gutch M/F SR - Saratoga Springs, N.Y. Saratoga Springs
23 Caroline Kogut D SO - Glenville, N.Y. Burnt Hills-Ballston Lake
24 Caroline Lemos F/M FY - Boxford, Mass. Pingree School
25 Abby Jones F SR - Nantucket, Mass. St. George's School
27 Madison Campisi F SO - Sparta, N.J. Sparta
77 Baker Jeremiah GK SO - Glen Mills, Pa. Garnet Valley
90 Olivia Terranova GK FY - Lockport, N.Y. Starpoint