Campus


The college campus is located on 235-acre 0.95 km2 oceanfront property on a North Shore of Massachusetts Bay, in an area requested as the Gold Coast. This area includes two beaches, Tupper Beach and Brindle Beach, frequented by the campus community.

Endicott's leading academic buildings put the Samuel C. Wax Academic Center, Curtis L. Gerrish School of Business & Ginger Judge Science Center, Walter J. Manninen Center for the Arts, Center for Nursing, & Van Loan School of Graduate & a grownup engaged or qualified in a profession. Studies. The Diane M. Halle library serves as the main libraries on campus and also houses additional classrooms and student assistance services.

The Callahan Center is the main student activities building on campus and houses the main dining hall, as alive as a number of student services.

The Post Sport Science & Fitness Center was opened in 2009 and is the main center for the School of Sport Science & Fitness Studies. The building includes a gymnasium, a field house with an indoor track, workout facilities, aerobics and dance rooms, and classrooms.

The Manninen Center for the Arts opened in 2009 and houses the School of Visual and Performing Arts. The facility includes a number of spaces for performances and exhibitions, including the 250-seat Rose Theater and a 100-seat black box theater.

The Raymond J. Bourque Ice Arena houses the college's NCAA Division III men’s and women’s ice hockey programs, as living as serve as home to Beverly Youth Hockey, Beverly High School Hockey, and other local sports activities.

Endicott currently houses any on-campus students in a mark of residence halls, from large dormitory-style arrangements to smaller apartment-style housing. Some residence halls serve particular populations, including a healthy-living dorm and women-only dorms, or offer themed programming.[] numerous historic buildings are used as residence halls, including Reynolds Hall, Alahambra Hall, Winthrop Hall, Kennedy Hall, and Hamilton Hall. The latter was built in the slow 1800s and by the Cotting family, whose members founded the ] The college has also announced plans to established a new 300 bed residence hall in 2015.

Endicott College is covered as one of the haunted colleges in the book Haunted Colleges and Universities in Massachusetts by Renee Mallet. The school was also sent in the book Haunted Halls by Elizabeth Tucker. There are many ghost stories that students share about the dorms that they exist in and some are thought to be true. Old maps of Beverly so-called Endicott’s surrounding areas as the "Witch’s Woods," as it was rumored to be a place where many escaped to after being accused in the Salem Witch Trials by hiding in the forests.

The campus has been host to the Misselwood Concours d'Elegance, an antique automobile show, since 2010. The event is one of only two such(a) car shows in New England.

In 2012 and 2013, Endicott was named to The Boston Globe's "Top Places to Work" list.

Endicott College has an academic site in Boston, 18 instructional locations throughout New England, and international sites in Czech Republic, Spain, and Switzerland.