Boston leaders are moving forward on a historic effort to bring a satellite campus of a Historically Black College or University (HBCU) to the city. Despite being home to dozens of institutions of higher education, Boston currently hosts no HBCU, making this initiative a groundbreaking step in expanding educational access and representation.
City Council Vice President Brian Worrell recently introduced a proposal calling for a public hearing this coming fall focused on exploring the creation of an HBCU presence in Boston. The initiative is tied to the city’s Building Bridges HBCU program, which is working to identify a qualified institution and location for a satellite campus.
Worrell framed the effort as a restoration of Boston’s legacy in Black education:
“An HBCU presence would provide role models for current Black students by showing them a tangible pathway to success,” he said, referencing the city’s role in early Black education with the historic Abiel Smith School. The proposal emphasizes Boston’s collection of more than two dozen colleges—yet not one HBCU.
Boston Public Schools Chief of Student Support Cory McCarthy echoed the momentum behind the idea, noting that “the appetite for an HBCU has grown immensely within the last five years.” According to the council motion, the need for culturally responsive institutions has intensified amid broader political and educational shifts.
Although HBCUs comprise just 3 percent of higher education institutions in the U.S., they account for a disproportionate share of Black professionals: about 40 percent of engineers and congressional members, 50 percent of lawyers and physicians, and 70 percent of dentists, according to leadership statements.
The proposal has already been formally referred to Boston’s Committee on Education, with a hearing expected this fall. Boston officials have pledged updates once the Building Bridges HBCU program completes its site and institutional evaluations.
Why Boston Is Poised for an HBCU Campus
Boston has long been a higher education hub, home to prestigious universities, community colleges, and tech institutes. Yet the absence of an HBCU represents a notable gap in culturally affirming educational spaces for Black students in northern states. Several stakeholders believe establishing a satellite campus could serve as a model for HBCU expansion beyond the Southeast.
The proposed Boston initiative draws inspiration from recent satellite campuses opened by HBCUs on the West Coast, including those established in San Diego and Los Angeles County in 2024. In those cases, successful accreditation and campus planning have served as operational templates for expansion into new regions.
Boston’s Building Bridges HBCU program is expected to work with a partner institution—potentially from the NCAA-level private HBCUs—to establish academic programs focused on culturally aligned curriculum, career readiness, and community engagement.
Impact and Broader Significance
A Boston HBCU campus represents more than just geographic expansion—it signals a strategic, equity-focused commitment to diversify educational access and invest in local Black leadership development. Students would benefit from locally accessible programming, while partner institutions gain a foothold in the Northeast with new student pipelines and alumni networks.
The move also aligns with ongoing efforts to bolster equitable educational access amid recent legislative shifts around diversity and inclusion. By positioning an HBCU satellite in Boston, city leaders aim to reinforce an educational ecosystem that values representation and builds institutional capacity for Black student success.
Timeline & Next Steps
- Public hearing expected fall 2025 by Boston City Council’s Education Committee
- Building Bridges HBCU to deliver updates on institutional partnerships and potential sites later this year
- Campus planning set to begin once partner institution is selected and funding framework is confirmed