Capital Community College

Capital Community College is a public community college in Hartford, Connecticut. The only public undergraduate institution in the City of Hartford, Capital's roots date to 1967 with the founding of Greater Hartford Community College. In 1992 Capital merged with Hartford State Technical College to become Capital Community-Technical College in a state-mandated consolidation. In 2000, the College's name was changed to Capital Community College.

Capital Community College
TypeCommunity college
Established1967/1992
Interim Campus Chief Executive OfficerDr. G. Duncan Harris
Students3,302[1]
Location, ,
United States
MascotThe Commodores
Websitewww.capitalcc.edu

The college is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges and enrolled 3,302 students in fall 2016.[1] It claims to be one of the most ethnically diverse campuses in New England. Sixty-seven percent of students are African American and Latino. Its programs of study include the associate degree in Nursing—the largest degree program for the preparation of Registered Nurses in the State of Connecticut.

The college made a significant step in helping the redevelopment in downtown Hartford by opening up a new campus at the former G. Fox & Co. department store on Main Street in the heart of downtown. The 1,913,000-square-foot (177,700 m2) building served as the home of the department store until it closed in 1993. The entire building was renovated and in 2002 the college moved into the building as well as numerous state and city offices and numerous retail clients on the ground level.

Before opening up in downtown Hartford the college had two campuses in the city, one on Woodland Street and another on Flatbush Avenue.

Notable alumni

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gollark: I am fine with people using land for community things. I just don't think it makes much sense to randomly rent out land cheaply if you have an issue with local land pricing.
gollark: I don't even know what economic system would actually work at this point but some markety thing seems to be the best available in a lot of domains.
gollark: Convince other people with money to give you land?
gollark: It sounds like one of those "technically accurate, but not very useful except maybe in a really specific context" definitions.

References

  1. As of fall 2016. "College Enrollment and Full Time Equivalency". State of Connecticut. Retrieved 9 March 2018.



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