to Monroe Business Institute. More classrooms were added on Morris Avenue, and in 1977 the West Farms facilities were closed and all Monroe programs were consolidated in the Fordham Road area.
In 1990 the school received accreditation from the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, and the name was again changed, to Monroe College.
On-campus student housing was constructed at its New Rochelle, New York, location in 2003. In the same year, degree programs in hospitality, criminal justice and culinary arts were introduced. The college built Milavec Hall, a building for math, English and arts classes, and began construction of a 200-bed student housing building at its Main Street location in New York.
Online course options for business management and administration were introduced in 2004 and an MBA program was added in 2005.
=== Leadership ===
Mildred King (1933–1972)
Harry Jerome (1936–1978)
Stephen Jerome (1978–2016)
Marc M. Jerome (2017–present)
== Academics ==
Monroe has more than 250 full-time …