Former name | University at Lewisburg (1846–1886)[1] |
|---|---|
| Type | Privateliberal arts college |
| Established | 1846 (179 years ago) (1846)[1] |
| Endowment | $1.07 billion (2022)[2] |
| President | John C. Bravman[1] |
Academic staff | 423[3] |
| Undergraduates | 3,747[3] |
| Postgraduates | 40[3] |
| Location | ,, U.S. 40°57′17″N76°53′01″W / 40.95472°N 76.88361°W /40.95472; -76.88361 |
| Campus | 450 acres (1.8 km2)[3] |
| Colors | Blue and orange[4] |
| Nickname | Bison |
Sporting affiliations | NCAA Division I (FCS)Patriot LeagueCWPA[3] |
| Mascot | Bucky the Bison[5] |
| Website | www |
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Bucknell University is aprivateliberal-arts college inLewisburg, Pennsylvania, United States. Founded in 1846 as theUniversity at Lewisburg, it now consists of the College of Arts and Sciences, the Freeman College of Management, and the College of Engineering. It offers 65 majors and 70 minors in the sciences and humanities. Located just south of Lewisburg, the 445-acre (1.80 km2) campus rises above theWest Branch of theSusquehanna River.
Approximately 3,700 undergraduate students and 50 graduate students attend Bucknell. It is a member of thePatriot League inNCAA Division I athletics. Its athletic teams are theBucknell Bison and its mascot is Bucky the Bison.
Founded in 1846 as the University at Lewisburg, Bucknell traces its origin to a group ofBaptists from White Deer Valley Baptist Church who deemed it "desirable that a Literary Institution should be established in Central Pennsylvania, embracing a High School for male pupils, another for females, a College and also a Theological Institution."[6]
The group's efforts for the institution began to crystallize in 1845, when Stephen William Taylor, a professor at Madison University (nowColgate University) inHamilton, New York, was asked to prepare acharter and act as general agent for the development of the institution. The charter for the University at Lewisburg, granted by thePennsylvania General Assembly and approved by the governor on February 5, 1846, carried one stipulation–that $100,000 ($3,500,000 today) be raised before the new institution would be granted fullcorporate status.
In 1846, the "school preparatory to the University" opened in the basement of the First Baptist Church in Lewisburg. Known originally as the Lewisburg High School, it became in 1848 the Academic and Primary Department of the University at Lewisburg.[7]
The school's first commencement was held on August 20, 1851, for a graduation class of seven men. Among the board members attending wasJames Buchanan, who would become the 15th President of the United States. Stephen Taylor officiated as his last act before assuming office as president of Madison University. One day earlier, the trustees had electedHoward Malcom as the first president of the institution, a post he held for six years.[8]

Although the Female Institute began instruction in 1852, it wasn't until 1883 that college courses were opened towomen. Bucknell, though, was committed to equal educational opportunities for women. This commitment was reflected in the words ofDavid Jayne Hill of the Class of 1874, and president of the college from 1879 to 1888: "We need in Pennsylvania, in the geographical centre of the state, a University, not in the German but in the American sense, where every branch of non-professional knowledge can be pursued, regardless of distinction of sex. I have no well-matured plan to announce as to the sexes; but the Principal of the Female Seminary proposes to inaugurate a course for females equal to that pursued atVassar; the two sexes having equal advantages, though not reciting together."[9] Within five years of opening, enrollment had grown so sharply that the college built a new hall–Larison Hall–to accommodate the Female Institute.
In 1881, facing dire financial circumstances, the college turned toWilliam Bucknell, acharter member of theboard of trustees, for help. His donation of $50,000 ($1,630,000 today) saved the college from ruin. In 1886, in recognition of Bucknell's support of the college, the trustees voted unanimously to change the name of the University at Lewisburg to Bucknell University.[10] Bucknell Hall, the first of several buildings given to the institution by Bucknell, was initially achapel and for more than a half century the site of student theatrical and musical performances. Today, it houses the Stadler Center for Poetry.[11]

The 40 years from 1890 until 1930 saw a steady increase in the number of faculty members and students. Whenthe Depression brought a drop in enrollment in 1933, several members of the faculty were "loaned" to found a new institution: Bucknell Junior College inWilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Today, that institution is a four-year university,Wilkes University, independent of Bucknell since 1947. The depression era also saw the commissioning by President Homer Rainey (1931–35) of architectJens Larson to design Bucknell's master plan. Subsequent expansion of the institution still largely adheres to this plan.[12]
The post-War period saw a dramatic increase in higher education enrollment across the United States, thanks first to theG.I. Bill and then to thebaby boom. Like other institutions, Bucknell's campus grew to accommodate a growing student body, and the college broke ground on many of the academic buildings that comprise upper campus. Chief among these is theEllen Clarke Bertrand Library, commissioned in 1946 under Bucknell President and former Governor of MaineHorace Hildreth and opened in 1951.[13] Other major additions from the building spree of the 1950s and 60s include the Olin Science Building and Coleman, Marts and Swartz Halls.
A growing reputation and changing expectations for undergraduate education in the United States called for improved facilities. The 1970s brought construction of the Elaine Langone Center, the Gerhard Fieldhouse and the Computer Center. In the 1980s, the capacity of Bertrand Library was doubled, facilities for engineering were substantially renovated, and the Weis Center for the Performing Arts was inaugurated.
Heading into the 21st century, new facilities for the sciences included the renovation of the Olin Science Building, the construction of the Rooke Chemistry Building in 1990 and a new Biology Building in 1991. The Weis Music Building was inaugurated in 2000, the O'Leary Building for Psychology and Geology opened in the fall of 2002, the new Kenneth Langone Recreational Athletic Center opened in 2003 and the Breakiron Engineering Building in 2004.[14]
Bucknell's 450-acre (180 ha) campus comprises more than 100 buildings located over a gentle rise adjacent to theWest Branch Susquehanna River. The campus is divided into Lower Campus and Upper Campus byMiller Run and the Grove, a stand of oak trees that ascends the slope. Lower Campus consists primarily of student housing and the institution's sports facilities. Upper Campus mainly contains academic buildings. It offers views northwest across the Buffalo Valley towardMount Nittany and southeast across the Susquehanna River toward Montour Ridge. Bucknell's campus forms a cohesive architectural ensemble due to the sustained use of brick and the recurrent themes ofGeorgian style. The institution's first building, Taylor Hall, was constructed in 1848.[15] The oldest residential hall on the campus isDaniel C. Roberts Hall (originally known as Old Main in 1858). Its newest building, Holmes Hall, was inaugurated in 2021.

Rooke Chapel is thenon-denominational setting for campus worship, weddings, and celebrations, opened in 1964. The chapel was a gift ofRobert Levi Rooke (class of 1913), a member of the board of trustees.[16]
Christy Mathewson–Memorial Stadium is a 13,100-seat multi-purpose stadium built in 1924 and renovated in 1989, when it was also renamed in honor ofChristy Mathewson (class of 1902), aNew York GiantsHall of Fame pitcher.[17][18]
The Bucknell Farm was established in 2018, building on the success of the Lewisburg Community Garden, a partnership between Bucknell University and the Borough of Lewisburg.[19] The 5-acre (2.0 ha) organic farm overlooking Montour Ridge offers learning and service opportunities for students and provides fresh, local produce for the institution's dining system. Along with a 1.76-megawatt solar array installed in 2022,[20] the farm reflects Bucknell's commitment to achievingcarbon neutrality by 2030 and long-term environmental sustainability.[21]
Bucknell Greenhouse is located on the fourth floor of the Biology Building. In 2023, the Century Plant (Agave americana) bloomed for the first time in thirty years.[22] The greenhouse contains three ecosystems: a desert, wetlands, and tropical and temperate forests.[23]
In 2023, the school began the first part of theBucknell Greenway, what will be a 4-mile (6.4 km) educational recreation path around campus, while also connecting to the athletic fields acrossU.S. Route 15.[24]
Spratt House is the home of the institution'sArmy Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) program.
Bucknell has a total enrollment of around 3,950 undergraduate and thirty graduate students. With around 400 faculty, the faculty to student ratio is 9:1, with the average class size of approximately twenty students. Bucknell has traditionally had strong engineering programs. With the addition for the Freeman College of Management in 2017, Bucknell offers a balance of foundational liberal-arts study and pre-professional training, a statistic reflected in the 25% of students who choose to double major.[25] In 2021, the largest majors were Accounting and Finance (79 graduates), Political Science and Government (76 graduates), and Economics (67 graduates).[26] For the years between 2015 and 2021, 18% of students reported pursuing post-graduate study within nine months of graduating.[27]

The College of Arts and Sciences anchors Bucknell University in the liberal-arts tradition. Its three divisions—arts and humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences and mathematics—host 275 faculty members in 34 departments and 66% percent of all students enrolled in fifty majors.[28] The college emphasizes intellectual community in diversity, transformative education for the common good, mentorship that encourages students to lead examined lives and leading-edge research and scholarship.[28]

Among American colleges that do not offer aPhD in engineering, Bucknell was ranked 7th, according to the 2024 edition of theU.S. News & World Report college ranking.[29] The same report ranked Computer Engineering 5th, Civil Engineering 3rd, Electrical Engineering 4th, and Mechanical Engineering 3rd.[29]
Students can choose from five tracks leading to theBachelor of Science in Business Administration degree: managing for sustainability, markets innovation and design, global management, accounting and financial management, or analytics and operations management. A five-year, dual degree in Engineering and Management is available for engineers with management career goals. In 2025, The Freeman College of Management was ranked 23rd among undergraduate business schools by Poets & Quants.[30]

The Bucknell Humanities Center opened in 2017 with the inauguration of Hildreth-Mirza Hall. The center continues Bucknell's tradition of humanistic inquiry through grants and fellowships for faculty and student research. It also coordinates programming ranging from the student-organized Humanities Week to guest speakers and faculty colloquia as part of its annual themed programming. Recent themes include "Non/Humanity" (2021–22), "Pandemics" (2022–23), and "Colonial entanglements" (2023–24).[31]
The Geisinger-Bucknell Autism and Developmental Medicine Institute was formed in April 2013 as a partnership between Bucknell and theGeisinger Health System, headquartered in nearbyDanville. This facility combines clinical treatment and interdisciplinary research onneurodevelopmental disorders.[32]
Other centers and institutes include: the Bucknell Institute for Lifelong Learning, the Bucknell Institute for Public Policy, the Center for Social Science Research, the Center for the Study of Race Ethnicity and Gender, the China Institute, the Griot Institute for the Study of Black Lives and Cultures, the Stadler Center for Poetry and Literary Arts, and the Weis Center for the Performing Arts.[33]
Almost half of all Bucknell students study abroad through a large number of exchanges with partner institutions, as well as Bucknell operated sites inAccra,Athens,Granada,London,Singapore,Sydney, andTours. Bucknell also runs a semester-long program in Washington, D.C., to support students with an interest in government public service.[34]
| Academic rankings | |
|---|---|
| Liberal arts | |
| U.S. News & World Report[35] | 31 |
| Washington Monthly[36] | 93 |
| National | |
| Forbes[37] | 85 |
| WSJ/College Pulse[38] | 81 |
In the 2024 edition ofU.S. News & World Report, Bucknell tied for 31st in the "National Liberal Arts Colleges" category.[39] The 2025 edition ofForbes rated Bucknell 85th in its list of "America's Top Colleges" and 19th among liberal arts colleges.[40] The 2022 edition of theTimes Higher Education U.S. College Rankings placed Bucknell 27th among U.S. liberal arts colleges.[41] In 2025,Washington Monthly, which ranks colleges and universities based on perceived contribution to the public good as measured by social mobility, research, and promoting public service, ranked Bucknell 93rd among liberal arts colleges.[42] In 2024, thePayscale "College Salary Report" ranked Bucknell 40th among all colleges and universities and 10th among liberal arts colleges for salary potential.[43][44] Bucknell is listed as one of the "Hidden Ivies" as published in 2016 by educational consultants Howard and Matthew Greene.
U.S. News & World Report classifies Bucknell's selectivity as "more selective".[29] For the Class of 2028 (enrolled Fall 2024), Bucknell received 11,377 applications and accepted 3,291 (28.9%), with 994 enrolling (30.2% yield rate). The middle 50% range ofSAT scores for the enrolled freshmen was 640–740 for reading and writing, and 670–760 for math, while theACT middle 50% composite range was 31–34. Beginning in 2022, Bucknell like most of its peer institutions is now test optional, meaning applicants can choose whether or not to submit SAT and ACT scores when applying. The average high schoolgrade point average (GPA) for enrolled freshmen the class of 2028 was 3.62.[45]

Bucknell is a member of thePatriot League forDivision Isports (Division I FCS in football).
In2005, themen's basketball team went to theNCAA men's basketball tournament and became the firstPatriot League team to win an NCAA tournament game, upsettingKansas 64–63. The victory followed a year that included wins over #7Pittsburgh andSaint Joseph's. They lost toWisconsin in the following round but received the honor of "Best Upset" at the 2005ESPY Awards.[46]The following year, Bucknell received a #9 seed (highest in Patriot League history) and defeated #8 seedArkansas in the first round.
The current Bucknell seal was approved in 1849. It shows the sun, an open book, and waves. The sun symbolizes the light of knowledge, while the book represents education surmounting the storms and "waves" of life.[47] Bucknell's colors are blue and orange, having been approved by a committee of students in 1887.[48] Thebison is the current mascot of Bucknell University. In 1923, William Bartol, a professor of mathematics and astronomy, suggested the animal due to Bucknell's location in the Buffalo Valley.[49] The school cheer is "'ray Bucknell!"
Bucknell has over 150student organizations,[50] a historical downtown cinema (Campus Theatre), a makerspace and crafts studio (7th Street Studio) and a calendar full of visiting speakers, art exhibits, performances, recitals, and year-end celebrations such as the "Chrysalis"ball and dinners sponsored by international student organizations.
Bucknell's student newspaper,The Bucknellian, is printed weekly. Its headquarters are in Stuck House onSouth 7th Street on the campus.[51] The college radio station isWVBU-FM.
As of 2024[update], Bucknell University has seven active fraternity chapters and nine active sorority chapters.[52]
Alumni of Bucknell University include:Burma's first physicianShaw Loo (class of 1863),[53]National Baseball Hall of Fame pitcherChristy Mathewson (1902),Pro Football Hall of Fame Fullback/LinebackerClarke Hinkle (1932), actorRalph Waite (1952), novelistPhilip Roth (1954), investor and philanthropistKen Langone (1957), actorEdward Herrmann (1965), literary theorist and translatorPeggy Kamuf (1969),CBS media executiveLeslie Moonves (1971), author and pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian in New York CityTim Keller (1972),[54] 2016Pulitzer Prize winner for poetry,Peter Balakian (1973), New Jersey congressmanRob Andrews (1979), CEO ofLord & Taylor andThe Children's Place,Jane T. Elfers (1983), entrepreneurJessica Jackley (2000), and basketball playerMike Muscala (2013).