The Old College Try: Nebraska's Ghost Colleges by John Irwin, Nebraska History Magazine, Lincoln, Nebraska, Spring 2023, pp 2-29.
It is amazing how many colleges have failed in Nebraska. Admittedly most of them are religious schools, but still pretty amazing. Here in Bellevue there is Bellevue College which was a Presbyterian institution. It went through periods of low enrollment and financial difficulty over time. At one point it called itself the University of Omaha to gain students from a wider area. Several things contributed to its closure. The church had difficulty funding the college. The tornado of 1908 damaged the main building, tearing off the roof requiring repairs. The final blow was WWI when many of the potential students were off to war and so enrollment dropped off considerably. At first the school was used to house military people. Fort Crook (Now Offutt) is close by. Several other colleges closed as a result of the war, and the flu epidemic. The great depression also took its toll.
Martin Luther College in Sterling Nebraska was a Luthren College. It had a emphasis in music. It brags of composer Howard Hansen coming from the school. It closed during WWI to reopen for a time in the 1920s. Its main building became a residence for disabled children.
In Wahoo, Nebraska is a more recent college, John F. Kennedy College. This was a for profit college that survived ten years. It is most noted for its female athletics and they sponsored softball teams that won the first three women's college world series. It closed in 1975 due to decreased enrollment due to the Viet Nam War. Both Ted and Bobby Kennedy visited the college.
A total of 45 colleges have died in Nebraska over the years. Some as recently as the 2020s. This article lists all of the colleges with a brief blurb about what happened to each.























