A historic institution in Kansas City, Avila University is a values-based community of learning, providing undergraduate and graduate education in the liberal arts and professional studies to prepare students who are creative, passionate, and driven to make meaningful contributions to the global community. Scholarship available for International students.
Avila University’s 50-acre campus is only a short drive from everything Kansas City, a vibrant metropolis that features world-class dining, shopping, and cultural attractions. Whether students want to catch at concert at the Kauffman Center for Performing Arts, cheer on the Chiefs or the Royals, or explore history at the National WWI Museum and Memorial, Kansas City has something for everyone!
Avila’s 100+ year history
The road to today’s modern institution of higher learning began in 1836, when the first Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet arrived in Missouri from the order’s home in the Lyons region of France. In 1866, Mother Francis Joseph Ivory came to Kansas City to staff a small school that incorporated as St. Teresa’s Academy (in honor of St. Teresa of Avila) shortly after her arrival. For more than 25 years, St. Teresa’s was the only Catholic school providing more than an elementary education for girls in Kansas City.
In 1916 the school became St. Teresa’s College, a two-year college for women. The school’s faculty of 15 sisters initially outnumbered the students. Five years later, in 1921, the University of Missouri accredited St. Teresa College. In 1930, the school became affiliated with St. Joseph Hospital’s School of Nursing, a professional emphasis that continues today at Avila.
In 1940, while celebrating the 75th anniversary of the arrival of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet in Kansas City, the school became a four-year institution named College of St. Teresa. Six years later, it received accreditation from the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools.
With enrollment increasing, the modern era of Avila began in 1963 when construction began on a much larger new campus in South Kansas City. With the new location came a new name, Avila College.
In 1965, Avila welcomed its first on-campus residents with the completion of Carondelet Hall. Another major milestone occurred in 1969, when the university became fully coeducational. Varsity athletics, an important aspect of life for many young men and women on campus, began in 1974 and the Mabee Fieldhouse, a modern indoor athletics center, opened in 1982. The university’s official nickname was changed to the Eagles in 1990.
Today, Avila continues to grow as a Catholic university and expand as it continues to offer faith and values-based academic excellence in the spirit of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet.