Rhodes College is a small, Presbyterian-affiliated liberal arts school of about 1,931 undergraduates that punches well above its weight by leveraging one of America's most underrated cities as a classroom. The campus itself is a showstopper — 13 buildings on the National Register of Historic Places, all built in collegiate Gothic sandstone that makes the whole place feel like it was airlifted from Oxford — but what actually sets Rhodes apart is its deep, deliberate entanglement with Memphis. This is a school for students who want the tight-knit, professors-know-your-name liberal arts experience but don't want to be marooned in a rural college town, and who are drawn to the idea that their city is as much a part of their education as their coursework.
Location & Setting
Rhodes sits in Midtown Memphis, one of the city's most interesting neighborhoods, on a 100-acre wooded campus behind a wrought-iron fence. Step off campus heading east and you're immediately at Overton Park — 342 acres of old-growth forest, the Memphis Zoo, and the Brooks Museum of Art. Head the other direction and you're in the thick of Midtown's restaurant scene, coffee shops, and music venues within a few blocks. Memphis as a whole gives students access to Beale Street, world-class barbecue, the National Civil Rights Museum, Sun Studio, and a legitimate music and arts culture that most small-college towns simply cannot offer. The flip side: Memphis has real urban challenges — poverty, crime, and inequality are visible and present, not abstract. Rhodes doesn't hide from this; it builds it into the curriculum. But the gated campus and surrounding neighborhood sometimes create a "Rhodes Bubble" dynamic that students and the college both acknowledge and push against.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Rhodes is a residential campus — roughly 75% of students live on campus, and most first-years and sophomores are in residence halls. Juniors and seniors can move off-campus, and many land in the affordable Midtown apartments and houses nearby, though a solid number stay on campus all four years. A car is helpful but not essential: the campus itself is very walkable (you can cross it in 10 minutes), and Midtown is bikeable and has enough within walking distance to cover daily needs. That said, Memphis is a car city, and students who want to explore beyond Midtown — Cooper-Young, the Broad Avenue arts district, Shelby Farms Park — will want wheels or a friend with them. Summers are genuinely hot and humid, which shapes campus life from April through October; fall and spring are beautiful, and winters are mild enough that snow is an event, not a season.
Campus Culture & Community
Greek life is a major social force at Rhodes — roughly 50% of students join a fraternity or sorority, and on weekends, Greek events anchor much of the social calendar. It's not the only game in town, but it's the dominant one, especially for first-years and sophomores figuring out their social footing. Students who opt out can find community through athletics, campus organizations (there are around 100 clubs), or the tight groups that form in small classes, but it takes more initiative. The culture skews Southern and social — students generally dress well, are friendly and polite, and there's a genuine warmth to interactions that feels specific to this place. The Honor Code is taken seriously and shapes daily life in tangible ways: exams are self-scheduled and unproctored, dorm rooms often go unlocked, and there's a baseline of trust that students cite as one of the best things about Rhodes. Traditions like Rites of Spring (an outdoor music festival) and the Lynx mascot culture give the campus a shared identity.
Mission & Values
Rhodes is affiliated with the Presbyterian Church (USA), but the vibe on campus is secular in practice. There's no required theology coursework, no dry campus policy, and no expectation of religious participation. The college chapel hosts services but also lectures, concerts, and campus events — it's more cultural landmark than religious center. Students who are deeply religious can find community, and students who aren't won't feel out of place. Where Rhodes' mission shows up most visibly is in its commitment to Memphis itself. The Bonner Scholars program, the Memphis Center, and dozens of course-linked community partnerships mean students regularly work in Memphis schools, nonprofits, and neighborhoods. This isn't performative — Rhodes has made "learning through the city" a genuine institutional priority, and many students cite their Memphis engagement as the most formative part of their education. The student-faculty ratio of about 10:1 means students are genuinely known by their professors, advisors, and coaches.
Student Body
Rhodes draws from across the South and increasingly nationally, though Tennessee, Texas, Georgia, and the Carolinas are well-represented. The typical Rhodes student is friendly, involved, and somewhat preppy — polos and sundresses aren't a stereotype so much as a Tuesday. The school has been working to diversify its student body and has made progress, though it still skews white and upper-middle-class. Politically, you'll find a range, but the center of gravity leans moderate to conservative by liberal-arts-college standards — more politically varied than peer schools in the Northeast. Students tend to be genuinely interested in their academics (pre-med and pre-law pipelines are strong motivators) but also social and community-oriented. There's less of the "I'm too cool to try" energy you find at some schools; people here are earnest.
Academics
Rhodes' strongest programs are in the sciences — biology and chemistry are standouts, with a pre-med track that sends a high percentage of graduates to medical school, aided by proximity to the University of Tennessee Health Science Center and St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, where students can do meaningful research as undergrads. The St. Jude connection is genuinely distinctive and not something most D3 liberal arts colleges can offer. English, history, political science, and international studies are also strong. The college runs on a traditional liberal arts core with distribution requirements called the Foundations curriculum — you'll take courses across the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, and a first-year writing seminar. Average class size hovers around 14, and the largest lecture you'd encounter is maybe 30 students. Professors are teaching-focused and accessible — office hours are used, not theoretical. About 60% of students study abroad, which is high, and the college runs its own programs in Europe and Latin America alongside external options. The academic culture is rigorous but collaborative; the Honor Code and small classes create an environment where students help each other rather than compete.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Rhodes competes in D3 as a member of the Southern Athletic Association for most sports, with field hockey in the Collegiate Field Hockey Conference. The school fields around 21 varsity sports. Athletics at Rhodes is real but not the centerpiece of campus identity — there are no athletic scholarships, and football Saturday isn't a cultural event the way it is at SEC schools down the road. That said, a high percentage of students are varsity athletes (roughly 25-30%), and many more play club or intramurals, so sport is woven into daily life even if it doesn't dominate it. Student-athletes are well-integrated socially — they're in the same classes, same Greek organizations, and same study abroad programs as everyone else. The D3 model here works as intended: competitive athletics alongside a full college experience.
What Else Should You Know
The campus architecture is worth mentioning again because it genuinely shapes how students feel about the place — the consistent Gothic stone buildings, the tree-lined walkways, and the careful landscaping create an environment that students are visibly proud of. Financial aid is solid and the school meets a high percentage of demonstrated need, though Rhodes isn't need-blind, so it's worth having the financial conversation early. The Memphis food scene is a legitimate perk — students eat remarkably well for college students, and the city's low cost of living means your dollar goes further than at peer schools in expensive cities. The biggest honest tension at Rhodes is the gap between the beautiful, gated campus and the economic realities of the surrounding city. The school is actively working to bridge that gap, and for many students, grappling with that tension becomes one of the most valuable parts of the experience.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 51° | 33° |
| April | 73° | 53° |
| July | 92° | 74° |
| October | 75° | 54° |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 8-6 | 1.7 | 1.4 | +5 | 7 | 1 | L 0-3 vs Mary Washington (CFHC Final at Marian) |
| 2024 | 14-6 | 2.9 | 1.4 | +29 | 6 | 3 | L 4-6 vs Mary Washington (Collegiate FHC Final at Sewanee) |
| 2023 | 15-3 | 3.6 | 1.4 | +40 | 5 | 3 | W 3-1 vs Centre (SAA Final) |
| 2022 | 14-3 | 3.6 | 0.9 | +47 | 10 | 2 | L 1-2 vs Centre (SAA Final) |
| 2021 | 9-6 | 2.5 | 1.5 | +15 | 5 | 3 | W 1-0 (OT) vs Centre (SAA Final at Concordia) |
| 2019 | 8-6 | 2.3 | 1.4 | +12 | 6 | 2 | L 1-2 vs Centre (SAA Final at Transy) |
| 2018 | 12-4 | 4.5 | 1.0 | +56 | 7 | 1 | L 0-3 vs Washington & Jefferson (NCAA First round) |
| 2017 | 12-5 | 3.8 | 1.1 | +46 | 10 | 3 | L 1-4 vs Centre (SAA Final) |
| 2016 | 15-3 | 3.9 | 1.1 | +51 | 9 | 2 | L 1-2 vs St. John Fisher (NCAA First round) |
| 2015 | 16-6 | 4.4 | 1.2 | +70 | 8 | 3 | L 0-3 vs TCNJ (NCAA Second round at TCNJ) |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School | Committed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Caroline Naifeh | GK | So. | 5-8 | Oklahoma City, OK | Casady School | Apr 2024 |
| 2 | Maria Zaporozhski | M | So. | 5-6 | Charlotte, NC | Roland Park Country School | |
| 3 | Ellie Pratka | D/M | Sr. | 5-7 | Houston, TX | Episcopal | |
| 4 | Layla Anderson | D/M | Jr. | - | Framingham, MA | Dana Hall School | |
| 6 | Sam Holke | D | Jr. | 5-3 | Saint Louis, MO | Villa Duchesne | |
| 7 | Lora Chandler | M/D | Jr. | 5-2 | Mechanicsville, VA | Atlee High School | |
| 9 | Addison Jones | F/M | Jr. | 5-7 | Centennial, CO | Arapahoe High School | |
| 10 | Meredith Dunn | F | So. | - | Saint Louis, MO | St. Joseph's Academy | Feb 2024 |
| 11 | Audrey Danz | F | Fr. | 5-2 | Lake Forest, IL | Lake Forest Academy | Aug 2025 |
| 12 | MaCaelan Rahn | D/M | Sr. | 5-4 | Orange, CT | Amity Regional | |
| 13 | Virginia Shuff | M/F | Jr. | 5-4 | Saint Louis, MO | John Burroughs School | |
| 16 | Molly Gmur | F | Sr. | 5-6 | Oconomowoc, WI | University Lake | |
| 17 | Zoë Dzialowski | D | So. | 5-8 | Coppell, TX | Greenhill School | |
| 18 | Lucy Frederick | M/F | Jr. | 5-5 | Louisville, KY | Assumption High School | |
| 19 | Alder Dickey | F | Jr. | 5-6 | Richmond, VA | Saint Catherine's School | |
| 20 | Bella Spina | F/M | Jr. | 5-0 | Voorhees, NJ | Eastern Regional High School | |
| 21 | Emily Forman | D | Fr. | 5-5 | North Kingstown, RI | North Kingstown Senior High School | Jul 2025 |
| 24 | Abbie Wallace | F | So. | 5-10 | Houston, TX | Saint Agnes | |
| 25 | Rose Martin | GK | Sr. | 5-2 | Hertfordshire, England | Haileybury College | |
| 26 | Summer Silverman | F/M | Fr. | 5-3 | South Easton, MA | Oliver Ames HS | Jun 2025 |
| 27 | Taylor Slutzky | D | So. | 5-6 | Littleton, CO | Colorado Academy | Apr 2024 |