Campus Overview

Newberry College is a small, Lutheran-affiliated liberal arts school in the heart of small-town South Carolina, enrolling roughly 1,462 undergraduates on a campus where nearly everyone knows your name — and your coach probably knows your professors. What makes Newberry distinctive is the degree to which athletics and academics are genuinely intertwined at a human scale: this is a place where a significant chunk of the student body competes in varsity sports, where your biology professor might show up at your Saturday football game, and where the tight-knit community is a feature, not a limitation. Newberry is for the student-athlete who wants to compete at a serious level in Division II while getting a personalized education — and who's comfortable in a place where the campus essentially *is* the social universe.


Location & Setting

Newberry sits in the town of Newberry, South Carolina — a small city of about 10,000 people roughly 40 miles northwest of Columbia, the state capital. This is genuinely small-town South Carolina: Main Street has a few local restaurants and shops, there's a historic opera house, and the surrounding area is largely rural. Stepping off campus, you'll find a quiet downtown that's walkable but limited. Columbia offers more — restaurants, nightlife, a bigger college scene around the University of South Carolina — but it's a 45-minute drive. Greenville is about 90 minutes northwest. The Midlands region is hot and humid from May through September, with mild winters that rarely see snow. The landscape is gently rolling Piedmont country — not mountains, not coast, but green and manageable year-round for outdoor training and activity.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Newberry is a residential campus — the vast majority of students live on campus, and the school requires it for underclassmen. Residence halls range from traditional dorm-style to newer suite-style housing. Upperclassmen sometimes move into apartments or rental houses near campus, but the town doesn't have a huge off-campus housing ecosystem the way a larger college town would. A car is genuinely helpful here. Campus itself is compact and easily walkable — you can cross it in about ten minutes — but getting groceries, reaching Columbia for a weekend outing, or doing much of anything off campus practically requires a vehicle. The weather supports outdoor activity most of the year; spring and fall are pleasant, and summers (though most students are gone) are sweltering.

Campus Culture & Community

The social world at Newberry revolves heavily around athletics, Greek life, and campus-organized events. With such a small enrollment and a large percentage of students playing varsity sports, athletes are not a subculture — they *are* the culture. Greek organizations have a visible presence and provide a social framework, particularly on weekends. Friday and Saturday nights tend to center on house parties, Greek events, or heading to Columbia when students want more options. The campus isn't completely dry, but alcohol policies are enforced in the dorms. For students not involved in Greek life or athletics, options narrow — there are student organizations and campus programming, but this is a place where you'll want to plug into something quickly. The upside of the small size is genuine community: students describe feeling like a family, for better and worse. Homecoming is a real event that brings alumni back and generates actual school spirit. Football games in the fall are probably the peak of communal energy on campus. The atmosphere is Southern, friendly, and relatively conservative, though not aggressively so.

Mission & Values

Newberry was founded in 1856 by the Lutheran Church and maintains that affiliation through the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA). In practice, the religious identity is present but not heavy-handed. There's a chapel on campus and occasional faith-based programming, but students are not required to attend services, and non-Lutheran or non-religious students generally report feeling comfortable. The ELCA tradition tends toward the more progressive end of American Lutheranism, emphasizing service and community rather than doctrinal rigidity. The school leans into a "whole person" development philosophy — character, service, and leadership show up in the institutional language and in how faculty and staff interact with students. Class sizes are small enough that professors genuinely know students by name, and advisors tend to be accessible. Students frequently describe feeling "known" — the kind of place where a dean might check in on you personally.

Student Body

The student body draws heavily from South Carolina and the broader Southeast, with a notable contingent of international student-athletes, particularly in sports like soccer, tennis, golf, and wrestling. The campus is more diverse than the surrounding town — Newberry has actively recruited a diverse athletic roster, and that shapes the student body significantly. Politically and culturally, the campus skews moderate to conservative, consistent with its Midlands South Carolina setting, though it's not monolithic. Students tend to be practical-minded, often first-generation or from working-class and middle-class backgrounds. The vibe is more "hard-working athlete from a small town" than "East Coast prep school." There's a genuine blue-collar ethic among a lot of the student body.

Academics

Newberry offers about 35 programs of study. Nursing is one of the school's strongest and most in-demand programs — graduates have solid NCLEX pass rates, and the program benefits from clinical placements in the region. Business administration and education are also popular and well-regarded within the school's peer group. Biology and the pre-health track draw students aiming for medical, dental, or pharmacy school, with the small class sizes providing a genuine advantage in mentorship and recommendation letters. The school also maintains programs in music (connected to the Lutheran choral tradition) and has invested in criminal justice and sport management, which appeal to the athlete-heavy population. Class sizes are genuinely small — the student-to-faculty ratio is approximately 14:1 — and most classes feel more like advanced high school seminars than anonymous lectures. Professors are teaching-focused; this is not a research university, and faculty are evaluated primarily on their classroom work and mentorship. The academic culture is supportive rather than cutthroat. Students who engage find real opportunities — undergraduate research, close advising, faculty who advocate for them in graduate school applications. Students who coast can also fly under the radar academically, so self-motivation matters. Study abroad exists but isn't a dominant part of the culture; most students' experiential learning happens through clinicals, internships, or field placements regionally.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Athletics is arguably the defining feature of campus life. Newberry competes in NCAA Division II as a member of the South Atlantic Conference, fielding around 25 varsity sports. Football is the most visible program — Setzler Field on campus is the hub of fall Saturdays, and the Wolves have been competitive in the SAC. Wrestling has earned national attention at the D2 level and has produced individual national qualifiers and champions. Men's and women's soccer, lacrosse, and basketball round out a broad athletic offering. Because a very large fraction of the student body — some estimates suggest over half — are varsity athletes, sports are not just a campus activity; they're the connective tissue of the community. Student-athletes are not set apart as a special class because, functionally, most of your classmates are also athletes. The coaching staffs tend to be deeply involved in student life, and the relationship between athletic and academic departments is close by necessity. For a prospective D2 athlete, the experience is one where your sport structures your daily life — practice, lifting, travel, games — while the academic side remains accessible and flexible enough to accommodate that schedule.

What Else Should You Know

Financial aid is a big part of the Newberry equation. The sticker price is significant for a small private school, but the institution discounts heavily — most students receive substantial institutional aid, and athletic scholarships (partial, as is typical in D2) stack with academic and need-based awards. Ask hard questions about your net cost and get specifics in writing. The town of Newberry itself is limited in entertainment and amenities; students who need urban energy will feel that constraint. But for those who embrace the small-campus, small-town experience, there's a simplicity and focus that larger schools can't replicate. Alumni networks are tight, particularly in South Carolina — Newberry grads in nursing, education, and business tend to stay in-state and hire from the community. One thing a well-informed friend would tell you: visit campus and stay overnight if you can. The feel of this place — its size, its pace, its personality — is something you need to experience in person. It's either going to feel like home or feel too small, and there's no way to know from a brochure.

Field Hockey

  • Hannah Dave has 82 career wins and won SAC Coach of the Year in 2024 after building the program from 13 wins in four seasons to a championship.
  • Team is 18-0 this season, ranked #3 nationally, and made the 2025 NCAA Final Four.
  • Assistant Coach Khotsofalo Pheko brings international playing experience and helped achieve the program's highest-ever national ranking of #7 last season.

About the School

  • Lutheran-affiliated liberal arts college where varsity athletes make up a significant portion of the 1,462-student body.
  • Located in small-town South Carolina, 40 miles from Columbia and 90 minutes from Greenville for urban access without campus isolation.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D2 High
FHC Rank
#3 of 34 (D2)
Massey Score
58.5
2025 Record
In-Region: 18-0
Division II: 18-0
Conference
South Atlantic Conference
Coach
Hannah Dave
Trajectory
↑ Rising
Season Results
'25: L 2-3 (OT) vs Shippensburg (NCAA Final)
'24: L 3-4 vs Mount Olive (SAC Semifinals)
'23: L 0-1 vs Limestone (SAC Semifinals)

Programs

Popular Majors

Health Professions (19%)
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing (48%)
• Allied Health and Medical Assisting Services (26%)
• Health and Medical Administrative Services (17%)
• Health Services/Allied Health/Health Sciences, General (9%)
Recreation (16%)
Business (16%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (65%)
• Accounting and Related Services (20%)
• Marketing (16%)
Education (10%)
Teacher Education and Professional Development, Specific Levels and Methods (60%)
• Teacher Education and Professional Development, Specific Subject Areas (40%)
Psychology (9%)

My Programs

Environmental Science
Psychology (9.3%)
Biology (3.9%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (35.3%)
French
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private (Episcopal)
Classification
Baccalaureate: Diverse Fields

Student Body

Total
1,507
Undergrad
97%
Demographics
47% women
Student:Faculty
14:1

Academics

Admission Rate
75%
SAT Median
940
SAT Range
820-1,060
ACT Median
20
Retention
70%
Graduation
44%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed

Costs

Total Cost
$44,240
Tuition
$30,050
Room & Board
$12,850

Avg Net Price
$20,351
Net Price ($110k+)
$23,338

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$20,902
Pell Recipients
49%
Take Loans
75%
Median Debt at Grad
$26,805
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
Town (Town: Distant)
Nearest City
Charlotte, NC (79 mi)

HighLow
January54°31°
April74°48°
July91°70°
October75°50°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 20-1 5.0 0.8 +89 11 2 L 2-3 (OT) vs Shippensburg (NCAA Final at Bloomsburg)
2024 15-4 2.8 1.3 +28 6 1 L 3-4 vs Mount Olive (SAC Semifinals at Newberry)
2023 14-4 3.4 1.6 +33 5 1 L 0-1 vs Limestone (SAC Semifinals at Mount Olive)
2022 11-8 2.4 1.7 +14 4 5 L 1-2 (2 OT) vs Mount Olive (SAC Semifinals at Converse)
2021 10-8 2.3 1.7 +11 6 4 L 1-4 vs Converse (SAC Semifinals at Converse)
2020 * 5-3 2.8 1.2 +12 2 1 L 2-3 vs Queens (NC) (SAC Semifinal at Queens)
2019 13-5 2.5 1.6 +16 5 1 L 1-3 vs Limestone (SAC Semifinals at Queens)
2018 8-10 2.0 2.2 -4 4 2 L 2-3 (OT) vs Queens (Nc)
2017 6-14 1.2 2.5 -24 1 2 L 2-3 (2 OT) vs Bellarmine (ECAC 3rd place at Lindenwood)
2016 6-11 0.9 3.1 -38 2 3 L 1-3 vs Mercy
2015 3-15 1.2 3.2 -37 2 0 L 0-4 vs Lindenwood (ECAC 3rd-place game @ Louisville)
* Shortened COVID season
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Hannah Dave Head Coach hannah.dave@newberry.edu View Bio
Khotsofalo Pheko Assistant Coach khotsofalo.pheko@newberry.edu View Bio
Tamsin Bangert Assistant Coach View Bio

Roster Breakdown

34 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 3% (1 player)
US Out-of-State: 68% (23 players)
International: 29% (10 players)
New Jersey: 15% (5 players)
Netherlands: 12% (4 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 12 (35.3%)
Midfielder: 6 (17.6%)
Midfielder/Defender: 2 (5.9%)
Defender: 9 (26.5%)
Goalkeeper: 3 (8.8%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 8 players (24%)
Forward: 3
Midfielder: 2
Defender: 3
Class of 2026: 7 (21%)
Class of 2028: 11 (32%)
Class of 2029: 8 (24%)

Full Roster (34 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Graysen Wright M/D Fr. 5-2 Princess Anne, MD -
2 Mia Pancoast F So. 5-2 Upper Township, N.J. -
3 Emma Swatski M/D So. 5-2 New Holland, P.A. -
4 Hannah Chalmers F Sr. 5-2 North Vancouver, Canada -
5 Jazmin Allen-Gregory D Fr. 5-1 Greensboro, NC -
6 Emma Westbrook F Sr. 5-8 Dover, D.E. -
7 Olivia Schrecker MF So. 5-9 Crestwood, K.Y. -
8 Finet Heemskerk MF So. 5-10 Ede, Netherlands -
9 Sofia Urzillo D Sr. 5-6 Mullica Hill, N.J. -
10 Lieke Varenkamp M Sr. 5-6 Middelburg, Netherlands -
11 Amber Tozana - Fr. - Bulawayo, Zimbabwe -
12 Jewel Keels D So. 5-2 Dumfries, V.A. -
13 Payton Keeler M Jr. 5-6 Bridgeville, D.E. -
14 Wibien Dahmen F Jr. 6-0 Bavel, Netherlands -
15 Parker Keeler F Jr. 5-3 Bridgeville, D.E. -
16 Georgia Langley D Fr. 5-3 Melbourne, Australia -
17 Abby Langlois F/MF Jr. 5-3 Reading, P.A. -
18 Agustina Montserrat M Sr. 5-4 Buenos Aires, Argentina -
19 Cassandra Mauck D Jr. 5-6 Pasadena, M.D. -
20 Katie Sharron A So. 5-10 Unity, NH -
21 Charlotte Putnam F Jr. 5-4 Methuen, MA -
22 Zoe Barker F So. 5-6 Chesterfield, V.A. -
23 Ella Weinhold F So. 5-5 Rindge, NH -
24 Karlijn Frenken F Fr. 5-7 Haarlem, the Netherlands -
25 Olivia Smith F Fr. 5-4 Missouri, SC -
26 Emma Ray F So. 5-0 West Babylon, N.Y. -
27 Emme Beck F So. 5-5 Manahawkin, NJ -
28 Ella Allardice D Jr. 5-5 Harare, Zimbabwe -
29 Emma Hulsmeyer D Sr. 5-5 Louisville, K.Y. -
32 Gab Zachary D Sr. 5-5 Mantua, N.J. -
36 Savana Lippe D Jr. 5-6 West Babylon, N.Y. -
59 Olivia Zavacki G Fr. 5-7 Millville, NJ -
76 Kensley Harris GK Fr. 5-3 Hampton Falls, NH -
79 Ayanda Mangenah GK So. 5-2 Marondera, Zimbabwe -