Union College is a small, historic liberal arts college in Schenectady, New York, with roughly 2,070 undergraduates and a distinctive identity built on blending traditional liberal arts with engineering and the sciences — a combination almost no school this size offers. Founded in 1795 as the first college chartered by the New York State Board of Regents, Union carries genuine institutional weight, but its day-to-day feel is intimate and relationship-driven: a place where professors know your name, the campus is walkable in ten minutes, and student-athletes are woven into every corner of campus life rather than siloed off from it. If you want a rigorous academic experience, a tight-knit community, the chance to compete in Division III athletics without sacrificing your education, and you're okay with cold winters and a school that asks you to make your own social energy, Union is worth a hard look.
Location & Setting
Schenectady is a small post-industrial city in New York's Capital Region, about 15 miles west of Albany and three hours north of New York City. It's not a college town in the idyllic New England sense — the city has real grit, with some blocks that are clearly working-class and others that have seen meaningful revitalization, particularly along the downtown corridor near Proctors Theatre. Union's campus, however, sits on a hill above the city and feels like its own world. The 100-acre grounds were designed in the early 1800s by architect Joseph-Jacques Ramée in one of the first planned college campuses in America, and the result is a cohesive, genuinely beautiful landscape organized around the iconic Nott Memorial, an imposing 16-sided stone building at the center of campus. Step off campus and you'll find a handful of restaurants, coffee shops, and bars within walking distance. Albany and Saratoga Springs are easy drives for more variety. The Adirondacks are about an hour and a half north, which matters if you're an outdoors person. But be honest with yourself: this is not a bustling urban environment, and much of your social and cultural life will be campus-centered.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
Union is a residential campus — about 90% of students live on campus all four years, and the college requires it for freshmen and sophomores. Housing ranges from traditional dorms to themed houses (like the Ozone House for environmentally-minded students) to Minerva Houses, a residential system Union created partly to provide social alternatives to Greek life. Upperclassmen can land in college-owned houses or apartments. The campus is compact and entirely walkable; you won't need a bike, and you definitely don't need a car for daily life, though having one is nice for grocery runs, trips to Albany, or escaping to the mountains. Winters are no joke — Schenectady gets real upstate New York cold, with snow from November through March. You'll learn to layer, and the wind whipping across campus in January is a shared bonding experience.
Campus Culture & Community
Union has a complicated but evolving social scene. The college is historically known as the "Mother of Fraternities" — Kappa Alpha, Sigma Phi, and Delta Phi were all founded here in the 1820s and 1830s. Greek life still exists and still shapes weekend social options, with roughly 30% of students affiliating. But the college has worked deliberately over the past decade-plus to diversify social life, most notably through the Minerva House system, which assigns every student to one of seven houses that host events, have their own spaces, and create a built-in social network regardless of Greek membership. Friday and Saturday nights, some students go to fraternity parties; others gravitate to Minerva events, club gatherings, or smaller get-togethers in campus housing. The hockey rink on winter weekends draws real crowds. The culture is generally friendly and approachable — it's hard to be anonymous in a school this small — though some students describe an adjustment period where cliques form quickly and you need to be proactive about finding your people. Traditions matter here: the Pearls & Rubies rivalry events against RPI, the annual Springfest concert, and the Dutchmen pride that runs through athletics and campus life.
Mission & Values
Union's institutional identity is rooted in integration — the idea that a liberal arts education should connect disciplines rather than silo them. The college emphasizes undergraduate research, interdisciplinary thinking, and developing well-rounded graduates. In practice, this shows up in things like term abroad programs, collaborative research with faculty starting as early as sophomore year, and a general expectation that you'll stretch beyond your major. Students genuinely feel "known" here; with a student-faculty ratio of about 10:1, it's hard to hide, and advisors and coaches tend to be meaningfully involved in students' development. There's a service-oriented streak — the college promotes civic engagement through its Minerva programs and community partnerships — but it doesn't define campus culture the way it might at a Jesuit school. Union is secular.
Student Body
Union draws primarily from the Northeast, with heavy representation from New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, and Massachusetts. There's a noticeable prep school contingent alongside strong public school representation. The vibe skews somewhat preppy and athletic — you'll see a lot of Patagonia and Vineyard Vines — but there are genuine pockets of artsy, activist, and science-nerd energy. Politically, the campus leans moderate to liberal, though it's not particularly activist compared to peer schools. Diversity has been an area of institutional focus, with growing representation of students of color and first-generation students, but it's still a predominantly white campus, and students of color sometimes describe feeling that reality. International students make up a smaller slice of the population than at some liberal arts peers.
Academics
This is where Union punches above its weight for a school of its size. The standout distinction is ABET-accredited engineering — biomedical, computer, electrical, and mechanical — housed within a liberal arts framework. You can be an engineer here and still take philosophy, do a term abroad, and play a varsity sport, which is nearly impossible at a large research university. Beyond engineering, Union is strong in the sciences broadly: chemistry, biology, neuroscience, and geology all benefit from excellent lab facilities and faculty who are genuinely focused on teaching and undergraduate mentorship. Economics is popular, as is political science. The humanities are solid if smaller — English, history, and philosophy have committed faculty, and class sizes (averaging around 16 students) mean seminars feel like real conversations. Union runs robust study abroad programs through its own international programs office; more than half of students study abroad at some point. The trimester system means you take three courses at a time rather than four or five, which creates an intense but focused academic rhythm. Faculty are accessible and teaching-oriented — you're not competing with graduate students for attention, because there are essentially none.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
As a Division III member of the Liberty League, Union fields about 25 varsity sports. The biggest deal on campus is men's ice hockey, which actually competes at the Division I level in ECAC Hockey — a notable exception to the D3 profile and a genuine source of school pride, especially after the program won the national championship in 2014. Hockey games at Messa Rink are the closest thing Union has to a big-time sports atmosphere. Beyond hockey, the D3 programs are competitive within the Liberty League, with strong showings in sports like lacrosse, soccer, swimming, and cross country. Student-athletes are deeply integrated into campus life — you'll be in classes with non-athletes, live in the same dorms, join the same clubs. There's no athletic scholarship money (it's D3), but the financial aid office works to build strong packages. Coaches understand that academics come first, and the time commitment, while real, is manageable alongside a rigorous course load. About a third of students play a varsity sport, and many more participate in club and intramural programs.
What Else Should You Know
Union's financial aid is need-based, and the college has been increasingly competitive in packaging aid to attract strong students, though it does not meet 100% of demonstrated need for all admitted students — worth a direct conversation with the financial aid office. The Minerva House system is relatively new in institutional terms and still finding its footing; some students love it, others see it as an administrative answer to the Greek life question that hasn't fully replaced it. The Ramée campus plan is genuinely worth experiencing — it's one of the most architecturally coherent small-college campuses in the country. Schenectady's relationship with the college is real but sometimes complicated; town-gown dynamics exist. And one practical note: the trimester calendar means your schedule won't always sync with friends at semester schools — you may start earlier in September and finish at different times. Alumni networks are strong, particularly in engineering, finance, and law, with deep connections in the Northeast. Union is the kind of place that rewards students who lean in — it won't hand you a social life or career path, but it gives you every tool to build both.
| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 33° | 16° |
| April | 59° | 37° |
| July | 84° | 62° |
| October | 62° | 41° |
| Course Rigor | Considered |
| GPA | Considered |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 13-8 | 3.4 | 1.6 | +38 | 2 | 4 | L 2-4 vs Vassar (Liberty League Final) |
| 2024 | 15-5 | 3.0 | 1.5 | +29 | 5 | 3 | W 2-1 vs Keene State |
| 2023 | 11-8 | 3.1 | 1.9 | +21 | 4 | 1 | L 1-2 vs Vassar (Liberty League Quarterfinal) |
| 2022 | 11-6 | 3.2 | 1.8 | +25 | 5 | 3 | L 2-3 (OT) vs Stevens |
| 2021 | 7-10 | 2.1 | 2.6 | -8 | 4 | 1 | W 3-2 (OT) vs Stevens |
| 2019 | 6-10 | 1.6 | 2.1 | -9 | 2 | 2 | L 2-4 vs Babson |
| 2018 | 8-9 | 2.8 | 2.9 | -3 | 2 | 1 | W 6-1 vs Oswego |
| 2017 | 9-8 | 1.8 | 2.5 | -13 | 2 | 2 | W 3-2 vs Utica |
| 2016 | 4-13 | 1.2 | 3.0 | -30 | 1 | 4 | L 1-2 (OT) vs Cortland |
| 2015 | 6-11 | 1.9 | 3.0 | -18 | 2 | 1 | L 0-5 vs Cortland |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 00 | Sophie Brady | GK | Sr. | 5-7 | Medway, Mass. | Medway |
| 2 | Lily Durivage | M | Fy. | 5-4 | Slingerlands, N.Y. | Guilderland |
| 4 | Amy Vytopilova | F | Jr. | 5-5 | Manchester-by-the-Sea, Mass. | Manchester Essex Regional |
| 5 | Molly Halliday | F/M | Jr. | 5-1 | Monroe, Conn. | Masuk |
| 7 | Luna Coronel | D | Fy. | 5-2 | Carle Place, N.Y. | Carle Place |
| 8 | Katie Radzik | F | So. | 5-0 | Hanover, Mass. | Hanover |
| 9 | Katelyn Birnbaum | F | Fy. | 5-3 | Needham, Mass. | Needham |
| 10 | Reese Fendelet | F | Jr. | 5-10 | Greenland, N.H. | Berwick Academy |
| 11 | Aislin Devaney | D | So. | 5-4 | Watertown, Mass. | Watertown |
| 12 | Kate Nielsen | D | Fy. | 5-2 | Putnam Valley, N.Y. | Putnam Valley |
| 13 | Megan Dorsey | M | Sr. | 5-10 | Pembroke, Mass. | Pembroke |
| 14 | Maddie Greco | F | Jr. | 5-4 | Scarsdale, N.Y. | Scarsdale |
| 15 | Francesca Sullivan | M/D | So. | 5-5 | Westport, Conn. | Greens Farms Academy |
| 16 | Bobbi Serino | M | So. | 5-2 | Danvers, Mass. | Danvers |
| 17 | Rowan Dapson | D/M | So. | 5-4 | Montrose, N.Y. | Hendrick Hudson |
| 20 | Rachel Ostiguy | F | Jr. | 5-7 | East Greenbush, N.Y. | Columbia |
| 21 | Maggie Monaghan | F | So. | 5-3 | Medway, Mass. | Medway |
| 22 | Ellie Innes | F | Fy. | 5-4 | Sudbury, Mass. | Lincoln-Sudbury Regional |
| 23 | Kat Bruun | D | Sr. | 5-5 | San Diego, Calif. | San Dieguito Academy |
| 24 | Amelia Stevens | D | Jr. | 5-5 | Brewster, Mass. | Nauset |
| 25 | Macy Goodwin | M/D | Fy. | 5-8 | Castleton, Vt. | Newton North |
| 28 | Tess Parker | GK | So. | 5-7 | Wethersfield, Conn. | Wethersfield |
| 29 | Marion Stuntz | GK | Jr. | 5-11 | Boxborough, Mass. | Acton-Boxborough Regional |