Four Baptist institutions merged over the course of the 19th and 20th centuries to form Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School as it exists today. Its earliest roots are in the Hamilton Literary and Theological Institution, which began in Hamilton, New York in the early 1820s under the auspices of the New York Baptist Union for Ministerial Education. Soap and candle magnate William Colgate, a devout Baptist, was an influential trustee in the Union for Ministerial Education and took an active role in financing and championing Hamilton Institution. Hamilton Literary and Theological Institution later evolved in part into Colgate University. The present-day seminary's second heritage institution, the Rochester Theological Seminary, was formed in 1850 at the founding of the University of Rochester by a group from Colgate Theological Seminary who sought a more urban educational setting. Women were accepted, enrolled, and graduated as regular students beginning in 1920. The remainder of the Hamilton seminary had moved to Rochester by 1928, when the two seminaries merged to become Colgate Rochester Divinity School and moved to the 1100 South Goodman Street campus in Rochester.
1960s: Time of Turbulence
In 1961, the school was joined by its third legacy institution, the Baptist Missionary Training School, a women's school in Chicago founded by the Women's Baptist Home Mission Society. Persuaded by student advocacy and protest throughout 1968 and 1969---namely by the school's Black Student Caucus---Colgate Rochester Divinity School hired more African American professors to join the school's overwhelmingly white faculty, increased course offerings in African American religious and cultural studies, and formally established the Martin Luther King, Jr. Program of Black Church Studies in 1969. It was one of the first such programs instituted at a predominantly white seminary or divinity school in the U.S.
1970-present: Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School
The last significant institutional merger took place in 1970, when Crozer Theological Seminary moved from Upland, Pennsylvania to merge with Colgate Rochester Divinity School, and form Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School in Rochester, NY. The Divinity School shared its South Goodman Street facilities with several organizations over the years. St. Bernard's School of Theology and Ministry, a Roman Catholictheological school, occupied the South Goodman Street campus from 1981 until 2003, when it relocated to another site in the area. The American Baptist Historical Society, serving the American Baptist Churches USA, also occupied the South Goodman Street campus in varying capacity from 1955 to 2008, when the Society's offices and archival collections were relocated to Mercer University in Atlanta. After selling its historic 90-year-old campus next to Highland Park in 2016, Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School moved 2.2 miles north in 2019 to Village Gate Square in Rochester's Neighborhood of the Arts, near the George Eastman Museum and Memorial Art Gallery.
Martin Luther King, Jr., minister, activist, prominent leader in the civil rights movement; attended Crozer Theological Seminary in Upland, Pennsylvania before its merger with Colgate Divinity School in 1970
Joanna P. Moore, Baptist missionary to freed African Americans in the Reconstruction era South; graduated from Baptist Missionary Training School in Chicago
Frederick B. Williams, Canon and Rector of Church of the Intercession, Harlem ; Founder of Harlem Congregations for Community Improvement
Notable faculty
Conrad Henry Moehlman, church historian
Gayraud Wilmore, ethicist, historian, theologian, and civil rights leader known for scholarly contributions in the history of African American church and religious experience and black theology
Notable alumni/faculty
Notable individuals who both graduated from and served on the faculty of the school:
Walter Rauschenbusch, Baptist pastor and theologian integral to the Social Gospel movement