The University of the South — almost universally called Sewanee — is a small liberal arts college of about 1,598 undergraduates perched on a 13,000-acre mountaintop plateau in rural Tennessee, and there is genuinely no other campus like it in America. Founded by the Episcopal Church in 1857, Sewanee combines the intimacy and academic rigor of a top-tier liberal arts college with an almost magical physical setting: Gothic stone buildings, forest trails starting at the edge of campus, and a culture that takes tradition seriously without being stuffy about it. This is a school for students who want a tight-knit intellectual community, love the outdoors, and are drawn to a place with real character and history — not a school for anyone who needs a city nearby or wants to blend into a crowd.
Location & Setting
Sewanee sits on the Cumberland Plateau in southeastern Tennessee, about 90 minutes from Nashville and Chattanooga. "Rural" doesn't quite capture it — this is a campus that essentially *is* its own town. The 13,000-acre "Domain" (as students and locals call it) includes the campus, surrounding forest, caves, bluffs, and trail networks. Step off campus and you're immediately in woods. The tiny village of Sewanee has a few essentials — a market, a couple of restaurants, a coffee shop — but this is not a college-town experience in the way you'd find at, say, Middlebury or Davidson. The nearest real shopping or dining variety is in Monteagle (10 minutes) or Winchester (20 minutes). The setting is the defining feature: dramatic sandstone bluffs, old-growth forest, and some of the best views in the Southeast. Students who love this place *really* love it.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Sewanee is deeply residential — nearly all students live on campus all four years, and there's a strong expectation that you will. The campus is walkable (it's compact despite the huge Domain), though you'll encounter hills. A car is helpful for grocery runs or weekend trips but not necessary for daily life. Many students have cars by junior year. The weather is four-season Southern Appalachian: warm and humid summers, mild but real winters with occasional snow, and spectacular falls. The outdoors are central to daily life — students trail run, mountain bike, rock climb, and swim in natural pools. The Sewanee Outing Program is one of the most active organizations on campus, lending gear and organizing trips. This is a place where your Wednesday afternoon might involve a hike to a waterfall before dinner.
Campus Culture & Community
Sewanee's culture is a distinctive blend of Southern gentility, outdoor ruggedness, and intellectual earnestness. The "Dress Tradition" is real and worth knowing about: students wear semiformal attire to class on certain days (men in jackets and ties, women in comparable dress), and while it's technically optional, most students participate, at least some of the time. It's quirky, but it reflects Sewanee's embrace of its own traditions without irony.
Greek life exists and is a meaningful social force — roughly 50-60% of students join fraternities or sororities, making it one of the higher rates among liberal arts colleges. Weekend social life often centers on fraternity houses and outdoor gatherings. That said, Sewanee Greek life has a different feel than at a large Southern university — it's less exclusive and more integrated into overall campus life. Students who aren't in Greek organizations can still have a full social life, but it takes more initiative. Pre-Gaines (a beloved annual multi-day party weekend), the lighting of the Advent wreath, and Commencement weekend (where graduates process through an aisle of faculty in academic regalia) are traditions students genuinely care about. School spirit is more about love of place than athletic fervor — students are fiercely attached to the Domain itself.
Mission & Values
Sewanee is owned by 28 dioceses of the Episcopal Church, and that affiliation shapes the institution more than at many religiously-affiliated schools, though less than students often expect. There's a beautiful chapel (All Saints') at the center of campus with regular services, and the School of Theology (a graduate seminary) shares the mountaintop. But Sewanee is not a dry campus, theology courses aren't required for undergrads, and students of all faiths and none report feeling comfortable. The Episcopal influence shows up more as an ethos — a genuine emphasis on community, honor, and service — than as religious requirements. The Honor Code is taken seriously; students leave belongings unattended and exams are unproctored. There's a real culture of trust. The student-faculty ratio is about 10:1, and students overwhelmingly report feeling known by name by professors, advisors, and staff. This is a place that invests heavily in the whole person.
Student Body
Sewanee draws from across the country but skews Southern — you'll hear a lot of Tennessee, Georgia, Alabama, and Texas, with a meaningful contingent from the Northeast. The typical Sewanee student tends to be outdoorsy, a bit preppy, and intellectually curious without being aggressively careerist. The vibe leans moderate-to-conservative relative to peer liberal arts colleges, though there's a visible progressive contingent. Diversity has been an institutional priority and has improved, but the student body remains predominantly white and relatively affluent. International enrollment is modest but present. Students tend to be friendly and socially confident — the kind of people who hold doors and introduce themselves.
Academics
Sewanee is genuinely strong across the liberal arts, with particular strengths in English (the Sewanee Review is one of the oldest literary journals in America), environmental studies (the Domain is essentially a 13,000-acre outdoor lab), geology, forestry and natural resources, and the humanities broadly. The sciences are solid and improving, with recent investment in facilities. Pre-med students do well, though the program is demanding at a school this size. There's a robust study abroad culture — around 50% of students go abroad at some point, with Sewanee-run programs and strong connections to programs worldwide. Average class sizes hover around 14, and you will not be taught by TAs. Professors live in the community (many literally on the Domain), and it's common to have dinner at a professor's home or run into them on a trail. The academic culture is rigorous but collaborative — students push each other intellectually without the cutthroat edge you might find elsewhere. The Sewanee semester calendar includes a unique feature: a brief "Finding Your Place" orientation program for first-years that involves backpacking on the Domain.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Sewanee competes in D3 in the Collegiate Field Hockey Conference, and the athletic culture is genuine but doesn't dominate campus life the way it might at a D1 school. Sewanee fields over 20 varsity sports, and a high percentage of students are varsity athletes, which is typical of small liberal arts colleges. Athletes are well-integrated — your teammates will also be your classmates and your hiking partners. The intramural and club sport scene is active. Football has historical significance (Sewanee's 1899 football team is the stuff of legend — five wins in six days on a road trip), and there's genuine school spirit around rivalry games, but gameday culture is low-key compared to larger schools. For a field hockey player, the appeal is competing at a high D3 level while being fully integrated into an engaged campus community where your identity isn't solely defined by your sport.
What Else Should You Know
The cost of attendance is high (around $70,000), but Sewanee has invested heavily in financial aid and merit scholarships — the Sewanee Promise program guarantees graduates will be employed or in graduate school within a year, or the university will help fund an additional experience. The alumni network is famously loyal and tight-knit, which punches above the school's small size in career networking. The isolation is real: if you need regular access to a city, Sewanee will feel remote, especially in winter. But for students who embrace it, the mountaintop creates a sense of place and belonging that's hard to replicate. Sewanee consistently ranks among the schools with the happiest students and strongest alumni satisfaction — people don't just attend Sewanee, they become Sewanee people for life.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 45° | 29° |
| April | 67° | 48° |
| July | 84° | 66° |
| October | 68° | 50° |
| Talent/Ability | Considered |
| Demonstrated Interest | Considered |
| Course Rigor | Very Important |
| GPA | Very Important |
| Test Scores | Considered |
| Essay | Important |
| Recommendations | Very Important |
| Extracurriculars | Important |
| Interview | Considered |
| Character | Important |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 9-9 | 2.6 | 2.3 | +4 | 4 | 1 | L 1-5 vs Mary Washington (CFHC Semifinals at Marian) |
| 2024 | 9-12 | 1.4 | 1.9 | -10 | 5 | 2 | L 0-1 (OT) vs Rhodes (Collegiate FHC Semifinals at Sewanee) |
| 2023 | 1-15 | 0.7 | 4.5 | -61 | 0 | 0 | L 0-2 vs Concordia (SAA Quarterfinal at Rhodes) |
| 2022 | 2-12 | 0.8 | 5.1 | -60 | 1 | 1 | L 0-10 vs Marian |
| 2021 | 6-10 | 2.2 | 3.2 | -15 | 4 | 0 | L 0-4 vs Centre (SAA Semifinals at Concordia) |
| 2019 | 6-10 | 2.1 | 2.9 | -12 | 2 | 3 | L 0-5 vs Centre (SAA Semifinals at Transy) |
| 2018 | 10-6 | 2.6 | 1.6 | +17 | 4 | 1 | L 1-2 vs Transylvania (SAA First Round at Hendrix) |
| 2016 | 6-9 | 2.4 | 2.5 | -2 | 2 | 2 | L 0-6 vs Rhodes (SAA Semifinals at Rhodes) |
| 2015 | 11-6 | 2.5 | 1.5 | +17 | 5 | 3 | L 1-2 (OT) vs Centre (SAA Semifinal at Rhodes) |
| Name | Position | Contact | Bio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Haley Overstreet | Head Field Hockey Coach | hloverst@sewanee.edu | View Bio |
| Taylor Klesyk | Assistant Field Hockey Coach | tjklesyk@sewanee.edu | View Bio |
| Vickie Resh | Assistant Field Hockey Coach | — | View Bio |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 3 | Grace Torrey | F/M | Fr. | 5-2 | Pembroke, Mass. | Westfield |
| 4 | Mary Blair Tankard | M/D | Fr. | 5-5 | Staunton, Va. | Chatham Hall |
| 5 | Molly Haskell | M | So. | 5-2 | Charlotte, N.C. | Charlotte Catholic |
| 6 | Natalie BeVier | M/D | So. | 5-2 | Avon, Conn. | Northwest Catholic |
| 7 | Abigail Lee | F/M | So. | 5-10 | San Antonio, Texas | Saint Mary's Hall |
| 8 | Patty Arwine | M/D | Fr. | 5-5 | Upperville, Va. | Foxcroft School |
| 9 | Graci Vlattas | F/M | Fr. | 5-5 | Herndon, Va. | Westfield HS |
| 11 | Keagan Southall | M | Fr. | 5-6 | Richmond, Va. | St. Catherine's School |
| 12 | Caroline Bridges | M | So. | 5-8 | Winston-Salem, N.C. | Asheville School |
| 13 | Hudson Pugh | F/GK | Fr. | 5-3 | Fayetteville, N.C. | Virginia Episcopal School |
| 16 | Catherine Crane | M | So. | 5-8 | Houston, Texas | Episcopal |
| 18 | Kennedy Harcourt | M/D | So. | 5-5 | Louisville, Ky. | Kentucky Country Day School |
| 22 | Kylie Carter | D | So. | 5-5 | Fort Worth, Texas | Fort Worth Country Day |
| 23 | Shepard Ramsey | M | So. | 5-5 | Richmond, Va. | Trinity Episcopal School |
| 25 | Eva Stoilovich | F/M | Fr. | 5-6 | Franklin, Tenn. | Franklin |
| 54 | Miriam Hussaini | GK | Fr. | 5-6 | Houston, Texas | Memorial Senior |
| 94 | Ryleigh Cabral | GK | Fr. | 5-2 | Parkton, Md. | Garrison Forest School |