Campus Overview

Trinity College is a small, selective liberal arts college of about 2,193 undergraduates that occupies one of the most striking campuses in New England — a 100-acre hilltop in Hartford, Connecticut, anchored by the Long Walk, a row of connected Gothic brownstone buildings that could pass for a set piece from Oxford. As a founding member of NESCAC and a D3 competitor, Trinity offers the rigorous academics and competitive athletics you'd expect from that conference, but what sets it apart is its urban setting: this is the only NESCAC school in a real city, which creates both distinctive opportunities and honest tensions. Trinity is for the student who wants intimate liberal arts academics with an edge of real-world engagement — someone who's drawn to the New England prep-school-to-college pipeline but also wants internships, community partnerships, and a campus that doesn't exist in a bubble.


Location & Setting

Trinity sits on a hill in Hartford's south end, about two miles from downtown. This is genuinely urban — not "college town with a Main Street" urban, but state-capital-city urban. The campus itself is gated and self-contained, with enough green space and Gothic architecture to feel like a world apart, but step off Summit Street and you're in residential Hartford neighborhoods that have struggled economically for decades. That contrast is real and something students talk about. Downtown Hartford has restaurants, the Wadsworth Atheneum (the oldest public art museum in the country), the Hartford Stage, and Bushnell Performing Arts Center. Boston is 90 minutes northeast by car, New York about two hours southwest, making weekend trips doable. Bradley International Airport is 20 minutes north. Hartford itself isn't a college town in any social sense — students don't flood into local bars and cafés the way they would in a place like Middlebury or Burlington — so campus life turns inward more than you might expect for an urban school.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Trinity is a residential campus — roughly 90% of students live on campus all four years, and most do. First-years live together, and upperclassmen move into increasingly desirable housing, including some attractive brownstone-style residence halls along the Long Walk and Vernon Street. A small number of seniors live off campus, but it's not the norm. The campus is compact and entirely walkable; you can cross it in 10–15 minutes. A car is helpful for grocery runs and exploring Connecticut, but not essential for daily life. Hartford winters are New England winters — cold, snowy, and long — which pushes social life indoors from November through March. Fall and spring are genuinely beautiful on the hilltop.

Campus Culture & Community

This is where Trinity gets complicated, and where honesty matters. Greek life has historically been a dominant social force — fraternities and sororities have shaped weekend culture for decades, and while the college has taken steps to reduce that dominance (banning hard alcohol at events, increasing programming alternatives), Greek organizations still anchor a significant portion of the social scene. Friday and Saturday nights often center on fraternity houses along Vernon Street. For students not interested in Greek life, there are alternatives — student organizations, cultural houses, the Bantam sports community — but it takes more initiative to find your social footing outside the Greek system. The culture has a reputation for being socially stratified, with prep school networks carrying real weight. That said, the school has been actively working to broaden its social fabric, investing in the Bantam Network (a peer mentoring program) and expanding multicultural programming. Homecoming draws strong alumni engagement. The annual Human Rights Lecture Series is a point of genuine institutional pride rather than just a brochure line.

Mission & Values

Trinity was founded in 1823 as an Episcopalian alternative to Congregationalist Yale, and while it shed its religious affiliation long ago, a faint Episcopalian sensibility lingers — think civic-minded, understated, valuing tradition without being doctrinaire. The school has invested heavily in community engagement with Hartford, running programs like the Center for Urban and Global Studies and Trinfo Café, a student-run community space. These aren't window dressing; some students build their entire academic experience around Hartford partnerships. The institutional push toward civic engagement is genuine, though not every student engages with it. With a 9:1 student-faculty ratio and an average class size around 16, students are known by name. Advisors and professors are accessible in the way that only a school this size can deliver — office hours that turn into mentorships, research collaborations that start sophomore year.

Student Body

Trinity draws heavily from New England prep schools and suburban public schools along the northeastern corridor — think Fairfield County, Connecticut; Westchester, New York; the Boston suburbs. The school has been working to diversify its student body, and roughly 20% of students identify as domestic students of color, with a growing international population. But the prevailing aesthetic still skews preppy and affluent. Students tend to be socially aware but not deeply activist; political engagement leans moderate-to-liberal without the intensity you'd find at a place like Wesleyan (just 25 minutes south). There's a noticeable pre-professional streak — many students are thinking about finance, consulting, or law school — alongside a genuine contingent of intellectually curious liberal arts types. The school's economic diversity has improved with need-blind admissions, but Trinity's reputation as a "country club" school, while outdated, isn't entirely in the rearview mirror.

Academics

Trinity's standout programs include political science (bolstered by its location in a state capital), economics, neuroscience, and human rights studies — the Human Rights Program is nationally recognized and a genuine draw. The college's urban location feeds strong programs in public policy and community action, and the Center for Urban and Global Studies lets students do fieldwork in Hartford as part of their coursework. Engineering is available through a 3-2 program, and the sciences benefit from a well-equipped science center. Study abroad participation is high — around 50% of students go abroad, with Trinity's Rome campus (a semester-long program at a dedicated facility) being a signature offering. The curriculum requires a first-year seminar and distribution requirements across five areas but doesn't have a rigid core, giving students flexibility. Classes are small and discussion-driven; you won't find lecture halls here. Faculty are teaching-focused, and the expectation is that you'll engage — this isn't a place to hide in the back row. The writing culture is strong across departments.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

As a NESCAC school, Trinity fields 29 varsity sports and competes against the likes of Amherst, Williams, Middlebury, and Wesleyan. Squash is the marquee program — Trinity men's squash won 13 consecutive national championships and remains a powerhouse. Ice hockey, lacrosse, and rowing are also strong. About 30% of students are varsity athletes, which means athletes are woven into the social fabric rather than existing in a separate world. NESCAC's philosophy — no athletic scholarships, no post-season redshirting, academics first — means student-athletes are genuinely students first. Game days don't transform campus the way they would at a D1 school, but there's real support for big rivalry matchups, especially against Wesleyan (the schools are 25 miles apart). Club and intramural sports fill out the picture for non-varsity athletes.

What Else Should You Know

The relationship between Trinity and Hartford is the elephant in the room. Hartford has real economic challenges — it's one of the poorest cities in Connecticut despite being the state capital — and campus safety is a perennial topic of conversation. The college has invested heavily in campus security and neighborhood partnerships, and most students report feeling safe on campus, but it's something families ask about and the school addresses directly during admitted student events. Financial aid is strong if you get it — Trinity meets 100% of demonstrated need — but the sticker price is steep and some families find the aid packages less generous than peer institutions. Alumni networks are tight, especially in finance and in the Northeast. The campus itself is genuinely gorgeous — the Chapel and the Long Walk are worth seeing even if you never enroll. And if you're weighing Trinity against other NESCACs, the real question is whether you want the urban dimension: Hartford gives Trinity a texture that Williamstown, Middlebury, and Brunswick simply can't offer, for better and for more complicated.

Field Hockey

  • Coach Jessica Bergen in year 3; 85 wins at Westfield State (2012–2022), including 2014 and 2021 MASCAC titles.
  • 2023 NFCHA All-American (Jackie Frank); four All-Conference/All-Region selections under Bergen.
  • 84% of roster recruited out-of-state; attends Disney, SuperSixty December, and CCG showcases.

About the School

  • Only NESCAC school in a major city; downtown Hartford offers Wadsworth Atheneum, theater, and dining.
  • 100-acre hilltop campus with Gothic Long Walk architecture; Boston 90 min, New York 2 hours away.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D3 High
FHC Rank
#41 of 163 (D3)
Massey Score
40.4 *
Conference
New England Small College Athletic Conference
Trajectory
↓ Declining
Season Results
'25: L 1-2 vs Amherst
'24: L 1-2 vs Amherst
'23: L 1-6 vs Middlebury (NESCAC Quarterfinal)
Program Activity:
Very Active (13 posts/mo)
Team Culture Active Recruiter
17 commits announced publicly

Programs

Popular Majors

Social Sciences (40%) (D3 avg: 17%)
Economics (40%)
Political Science and Government (40%)
• Urban Studies/Affairs (9%)
• Sociology (6%)
• Anthropology (6%)
Biology (11%)
Psychology (9%)
Public Administration (6%)
English (5%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (2.8%)
Psychology (8.9%)
Biology (11.5%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology
French (1.8%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Baccalaureate: Arts & Sciences

Student Body

Total
2,232
Undergrad
98%
Demographics
53% women
Freshmen
17% in-state
Student:Faculty
9:1

Academics

Admission Rate
34%
SAT Median
1,385
SAT Range
1,310-1,460
ACT Median
31
Retention
91%
Graduation
83%

Events & Clinics

Recruiting Events:
Disney Showcase 2026
Super Sixty December 2025Dec '25
CCG DIII Showcase March 2026Mar '26
Upcoming Clinics:
Apr 26 Spring Clinic
May 30 Spring Clinic
Jun 20 Summer Clinic

Costs

Total Cost
$83,090
Tuition
$67,420
Room & Board
$17,990

Avg Net Price
$35,009
Net Price ($110k+)
$46,149

Financial Aid

Freshmen Getting Aid
68%

Merit Aid

Avg Merit Grant
$23,542
Freshmen Merit Only
8%

Need-Based Aid

Freshmen w/ Need
60%
Avg % Need Met
100%
Avg Aid Package
$58,133
Grants / Loans
$57,089 / $2,317

Debt at Graduation

Avg Debt
$40,969
Grads w/ Loans
55%
Source: CDS 2024

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Midsize)
Nearest City
Hartford, CT (2 mi)
Major Metro
New York, NY (99 mi)

HighLow
January37°20°
April60°40°
July85°66°
October64°44°

Admissions


Early Application

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

Class Size

Under 20
67%
20–29
25%
30–39
6%
40+
1%
Source: CDS 2024

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 3-12 1.3 2.7 -21 0 1 L 1-2 vs Amherst
2024 5-10 2.0 3.5 -23 0 2 L 1-2 vs Amherst
2023 9-7 2.3 2.1 +4 5 2 L 1-6 vs Middlebury (NESCAC Quarterfinal)
2022 15-5 2.6 0.9 +33 6 2 L 0-3 vs Middlebury (NCAA Quarterfinals)
2021 15-6 2.7 1.2 +31 9 3 L 0-1 vs Johns Hopkins (NCAA Semifinals at Trinity)
2019 8-8 2.3 1.7 +10 2 3 L 1-3 vs Middlebury (NESCAC First Round)
2018 12-5 2.5 0.5 +34 11 0 L 0-1 vs Middlebury (NESCAC Semifinals at Midd)
2017 14-7 2.7 2.0 +15 4 3 L 0-5 vs Messiah (NCAA Quarterfinals)
2016 13-5 3.3 1.9 +25 3 0 L 1-2 vs Ursinus (NCAA Second round at Salisbury)
2015 8-8 2.4 2.2 +3 3 1 L 0-2 vs Tufts (NESCAC Quarterfinals)
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Jessica Bergen Head Field Hockey Coach jessica.bergen@trincoll.edu View Bio
Hannah Tepper Assistant Field Hockey Coach hannah.tepper@trincoll.edu View Bio
Katie Kozey Goalkeeper Coach kathryn.kozey@trincoll.edu View Bio
Grace Mangiameli Assistant Field Hockey Coach View Bio
Kristen Eshleman Faculty/Staff Liaison
Agnes Agosto Field Hockey Manager
Kate Tebbe Field Hockey Manager

Roster Breakdown

31 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 16% (5 players)
US Out-of-State: 84% (26 players)
Massachusetts: 35% (11 players)
Pennsylvania: 16% (5 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 16 (51.6%)
Midfielder: 12 (38.7%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 6 players (19%)
Forward: 1
Midfielder: 5
Class of 2026: 6 (19%)
Class of 2028: 11 (35%)
Class of 2029: 8 (26%)

Full Roster (31 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School Committed
1 Claire Griffith Forward So. 5-7 Westfield, Mass. Suffield Academy
2 Harper Siemens Midfield Sr. 5-6 Tulsa, Okla. Holland Hall
3 Allyson Foley Defense Sr. 5-6 Ashburnham, Mass. Oakmont
4 Gracie Bookbinder Forward/Midfield Jr. 5-3 Wayne, Penn. Radnor
5 Skylar Stewart Forward So. 5-5 Katonah, N.Y. Sacred Heart
6 Aly Janssen Forward So. 5-6 Old Greenwich, Conn. Greenwich
7 Julia Lambert Midfield So. 5-5 Concord, Mass. Concord Carlisle
8 Caroline Currie Midfield/Defense Jr. 5-5 Oklahoma City, Okla. Casady
9 Lily Vincent Forward Fy. 5-5 Greenwich, Conn. Westminster School Mar 2025
10 Fiona Murphy Midfield Jr. 5-5 Windsor, Conn. Loomis Chaffee School
11 Lindsay Rogers Defense Fy. 5-2 Norwood, Mass. Phillips Exeter Academy
12 Liette Letourneau Forward So. 5-7 Acton, Mass. Acton-Boxboro
13 Riley Harrington Forward So. 5-3 Longmeadow, Mass. Deerfield Academy
14 Tatum Stickney Midfield Jr. 5-8 Byfield, Mass. The Governor's Academy
15 Maeve Hymovitz Midfield Sr. 5-7 Needham, Mass. Needham
16 Eva McKelvey Defense So. 5-7 Sag Harbor, N.Y. Pierson
17 Anna Scott Defense So. 5-3 York, Pa. Central York
18 Reagan Waldner Midfield So. 5-6 Cohasset, Mass. Notre Dame Academy
19 Kate McManus Midfield Sr. 5-4 Chatham, N.J. Chatham
20 Olivia Keating Forward Fy. 5-6 Ridgefield, Conn. Ridgefield Mar 2025
21 Clare Campbell Defense Fy. 5-4 Longmeadow, Mass. Longmeadow Mar 2025
22 Lucy Werner Defense Sr. 6-0 Andover, N.H. Proctor Academy (N.H.)
23 Brooke DiBiase Forward Jr. 5-7 Chatham, N.J. Chatham
24 Ella Cait Lisowski Forward/Midfield So. 5-7 West Chester, Pa. Merion Mercy Academy
25 Ava DiPasquale Defense Fy. 5-8 Morristown, N.J. Morristown Beard Mar 2025
27 Nina Falkson Forward/Midfield Jr. 5-6 Dedham, Mass. Noble and Greenough School
28 Alison Gerber Defense Fy. 5-5 Wayne, Pa. Agnes Irwin
30 Addie Bae Magruder - Fy. 5-6 Austin, Texas St. Stephen's Episcopal Feb 2025
32 Bridget Grosso Midfield Fy. 5-6 Wilton, Conn. Wilton Apr 2025
97 Hayley Gable Goalkeeper Sr. 5-8 Gilbertsville, Penn. The Hill School
98 Sydney Korkosz Goalkeeper So. 5-5 Thousand Oaks, Calif. Thousand Oaks