Dynamic Environment for Learning

In 1878, a group of Roman Catholic priests and brothers, members of the Congregation of the Holy Ghost (the Spiritans), established a small liberal arts college on a high bluff overlooking the industrial city of Pittsburgh. In 1911, the institution added schools of business and law and became known as Duquesne University. Today the University serves more than 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students, offering more than 150 degree programs on the bachelor, master, and doctoral levels through its nine schools of study.

 

National Ranking

  Long recognized as a regional leader, Duquesne has more recently earned rave notices nationally and around the world, including ranking for four consecutive years as one of America's top 10 Catholic universities from US News and World Report. Duquesne has reached unprecedented heights and strives ever forward, while maintaining the mission and values espoused by its founders more than a century ago.
 

People

  Duquesne's campus is more than just buildings and equipment — it's people. Whether a resident or commuter, a vibrant campus life (including NCAA Division I sports and more than 100 student social, service and professional organizations) is open to all in a friendly, inviting, exciting community atmosphere.
 

Location

 

Yet there's so much more. Just a few steps away is Duquesne's "extended campus" — the city of Pittsburgh. Long known as a center for steel and other heavy industry, Pittsburgh has been renewed and reborn as a diversified center of commerce. It ranks among America's largest corporate headquarters cities, and is renowned as an international center for high-tech and health care firms. 

Duquesne is located just blocks from the commercial hub of the city, offering easy access to the many commercial and cultural benefits the "Golden Triangle" offers:

  • Job and internship sites
  • Shopping in the department and specialty stores of downtown, Station Square, and the South Side
  • Major league sports
  • Pop and rock concerts at Mellon Arena and Station Square Amphitheater
  • World-renowned orchestras, opera, dance troupes and drama in the nearby Cultural District

Expand your horizons further with a short drive or ride via Pittsburgh's efficient public transit to the museums and night life of Oakland, or to any one of the city's scores of small neighborhoods, which maintain the unique charm and ethnic identities of earlier times, when a world of immigrants fueled both the region's and world's industrial furnace with coal and steel.

   
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