This is a list of past and present publications at the College of William & Mary. Many of them, such as The Flat Hat , are funded through the College's student activities fees. Some, however, such as The Virginia Informer , are privately funded.
The oldest extant student news sheet from the College of William & Mary is The Owl, an unofficial publication with a strong Southern political slant from 1854. The only known copy is held by the Special Collections Research Center (SCRC) in Earl Gregg Swem Library. Student publications in a variety of formats are actively collected by the SCRC.
Overseeing all school-funded publications is the Publications Council. [1]
Name | Began | Ended | Notes | Reference | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Advocate | 1969 | 2009 | [2] | ||
Alembic | 1968 | 1969 | An underground newspaper. | [3] | — |
The Brave Indian | 1947 | 1947 | Information unavailable | [3] | — |
College Observer | 1970 | 1971 | A supplement published by the Virginia Gazette specifically covering College news. Many of the writers and production people were students. The paper appeared weekly during the school year from September 1970 through December 1971. | [3] | — |
Cumtux | 1948 | 1948 | A short-lived newspaper. | [3] | — |
The DoG Street Journal | 2003 | still active | An online newspaper and monthly news magazine at William & Mary. Magazines are issued once a month and online stories appear irregularly during the academic year. | [4] | |
The Green and Gold Dispatch | 2013 | still active | |||
The Flat Hat | 1911 | Still active | The oldest campus newspaper at William & Mary. In October 2007, it won the Pacemaker award for excellence in the category of non-daily newspaper at a four-year university, and in 2010 was listed by College Media Matters as one of the 30 best collegiate newspapers in the United States. The Flat Hat now prints twice weekly, but up until the spring of 2007 it used to only print once weekly. It is funded partially through the Publications Council, a body composed of college administrators and the editors of other campus publications. The Flat Hat maintains editorial and procedural autonomy from the College. | [5] | |
Gladfly | 2015 | Still active | The Gadfly is an independent leftist publication at the College of William & Mary. | [3] | — |
Hatter | 1970 | 1970 | Also called Strike! Two issues were printed in the spring semester. | [3] | — |
The High Hat | 1930 | 1961 | The student newspaper of the Norfolk Division of The College of William & Mary (which has since become Old Dominion University). | [3] | — |
The Remnant | 1989 | 2005 | A weekly journal of student opinion. | [3] | — |
Rip-off | 1974 | 1974 | Possibly only one issue of this newspaper. Their slogan was, "All the news that fits, we print." | [3] | — |
Spirit of the Living Watching | 2012 | still active | An art and art history publication interested in both scholarly and creative responses to art as well as opportunities available to students on campus. | [3] | — |
The Straw Hat | 1914 | 1933 | A summer school newspaper originally published in Dublin, Virginia. Later issues began to get printed on the College campus. | [3] | — |
The Virginia Informer | 2005 | 2012 | The College's second largest student newspaper and printed monthly. It was one of the only newspaper at the College that was independently funded. The Informer was officially non-partisan but known to challenge the campus establishment and have conservative and libertarian editorials. | [6] [7] | |
W&M Standard | 2001 | 2006 | A conservative independent publication of The Standard. | [3] | — |
The William and Mary Excalibur | 1970 | 1970 | Information unavailable | [3] | — |
The William and Mary Observer | 1986 | 1987 | A journal of student opinion and investigative reporting. Only three issues were ever produced. | [3] | — |
William and Mary Perspective | 1987 | 1989 | Information unavailable | [3] | — |
The Williamsburg Daily Planet | 1975 | 1975 | A one-issue newspaper. | [3] | — |
Name | Began | Ended | Notes | Reference | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Gallery | 1979 | Still active | Formerly The Gallery of Writing; a poetry and literature publication. | [8] | |
The Gargoyle | 1973 | 1973 | A one-issue journal of literature and the fine arts. | [3] | — |
Jump! | 1983 | Still active | A news–feature magazine. | [9] [10] | |
The Logos | 2007 | Still active | A literary magazine. | [3] | — |
Manqué | 2004 | 2004 | Slogan was "the presence of absence." It had been previously published in an online edition only. | [3] | — |
Rocket | 2010 | Still active | Rocket Magazine is the premiere art and fashion publication at The College of William and Mary. Founded by Justin Miller in 2011, the purpose of Rocket is to provide an outlet for student artistic expression primarily through art and design, fashion, photography, and feature. | [11] | |
William and Mary Review | 1962 | Still active | Formed by union of the Royalist (1937–1962) and Seminar (1956–1962). | [3] | — |
William & Mary Comix | 2007 | 2009 | A publication with small print volumes containing artwork and comics created by students at the College. | [12] | |
Winged Nation | 1993 | Still active | Winged Nation is a literary arts magazine publishing only student work which "seeks to showcase students' unique view of the world through art, literature, and design." | [13] |
Name | Began | Ended | Notes | Reference | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ha! | 1994 | 1994 | Information unavailable | [3] | — |
The Owl | 1854 | 1854 | One of the earliest recorded examples of satirical literature at the College. The premier issue is the only remaining copy in Swem Archives. It debuted during the height of the antebellum period with the country torn over the issue of states rights and slavery. The Owl addresses many issues that would be considered controversial today, such as race and gender. Other issues addressed that are still present were professors, administration, and Williamsburg citizens. There is no evidence of funding found for The Owl. A theory on this is that The Owl was merely a joke amongst a group of students and they used their own money to pay to have it printed. Also there is no evidence to prove that multiple copies were produced and distributed. | [14] | — |
The Pillory | 1991 | 2013 | A satire magazine and only publishes one issue per semester. The magazine does not have any competitors per se, as it is not a news reporting magazine. It is well-known on the College of William & Mary's campus, however, that The Pillory and The Virginia Informer generally dislike one another. | [15] | — |
Sleuth | 2000 | 2000 | Two issue satirical magazine for the months of October and November. It was in a newsletter format – one long sheet with several humorous stories. Sleuth contained only one small advertisement per issue, located in the bottom right-hand corner. They provided coupons for the campus coffee house The Daily Grind and Williamsburg pub The Green Leafe, two popular student hangouts. | [14] | — |
The Taverner | 1987 | 1988 | A bound pamphlet, was composed of humor articles and stories within each issue. It never tried to mock real newspapers, thus making it a "soft news" publication. | [14] | — |
The Botetourt Squat | 2011 | Still Active | A satirical newspaper that mocks and provides humorous insight into campus culture. Named for the Botetourt Complex, infamous Freshmen dorms on New Campus. The newspaper does not currently have any competitors, though it occasionally jokingly derides The Flat Hat on principle. | [14] | — |
Ramble On | 2019 | Still Active | A comedy-centered arts and culture magazine that provides humorous reviews of films, television, music, literature, etc. as well as opinion pieces. It is made by the same people that provide William & Mary Television content. | [14] |
Name | Began | Ended | Notes | Reference | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Calling Out | 2006 | 2006 | Publication of the Asian Student Council. | [3] | — |
Colonial Echo | 1899 | Still active | The yearbook of the College of William & Mary, created entirely by students. The yearbook has been published every year since its first issue. Issues are published during homecoming weekend of the following academic year and distributed to students without additional charge. | [16] | |
From the Margin | 2005 | 2006 | A discourse on minority experience. | [3] | — |
Iskra | 1967 | 1968 | An alternative title was Spark. Presumably named after Iskra. | [3] | — |
Lips: Expressions of Female Sexuality | 2007 | Still active | A 'zine that was created by four students as a Women's Studies project in the spring of 2007. The purpose of Lips is to provide a space for open and honest expressions of sexuality from the female perspective. Entries include poetry, prose, essays, short stories, artwork, and magazine clippings. Lips is released once a semester. | [17] [18] | — |
Namet and Taket | 1945 | 1945 | Weekly volume designations during July and August 1945. | [3] | — |
The Progressive | 2004 | 2006 | A liberal, leftist, and/or progressive magazine, alternatively known as the William & Mary Progressive. | [3] | |
Uhuru | 1976 | 1976 | One issue (?). Other information unavailable. | [3] | — |
Underground | 2018 | still active | Underground focuses on sharing the experiences of the marginalized with William & Mary. Its content expresses the issues of the students, faculty, and staff at the College, including but not limited to members of the Latinx, Black, Asian and Pacific Islander, Native American, Middle Eastern, LGBTQ+, Disabled, and Neurodiverse communities. | [19] | [20] |
William and Mary Alumni Magazine | ? | Still active | The official magazine for all alumni of the College. It is mailed quarterly – once during each new season. It updates the alumni on happenings at William & Mary as well as future events and plans. In the back of the magazine it lists notable achievements by certain alumni per each graduating year, as well as any alumni deaths that have occurred since the previous issue. | [21] |
Name | Began | Ended | Notes | Reference | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Journal of Online Law | 1995 | 2001 | Created by the William & Mary Law School, it was an electronic publication of scholarly essays about law and online communications. | [22] | — |
The Monitor | 1993 | Still active | The journal of international studies at the College of William & Mary. The purpose of The Monitor is to publish undergraduate papers from a broad range of academic disciplines including, but not limited to: religion, history, sociology, anthropology, government, linguistics, international studies, international relations, and modern languages. | [23] | |
William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review | 1975 | Still active | Began as the William and Mary Journal of Environmental Law in 1975 to report on local and regional topics of environmental law. Today, the central function of the review is to provide a forum for professors, scholars, practitioners and students to publish articles on current topics of environmental law and examine in a more focused manner the policy implications behind the law. | [24] | |
William and Mary Law Review | 1957 | Still active | Published entirely by William and Mary law students, it is an annual volume of legal writing containing both professional and student work. | [25] | |
The James Blair Historical Review | still active | Student-run peer-reviewed history journal dedicated to undergraduate research. |
Name | Began | Ended | Notes | Reference | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eighteenth-Century Life | ? | ? | Information unavailable. | [3] | — |
Ideation | 2005 | Still active | A semi-annual magazine "to showcase the research and scholarship contributions to society being made by faculty and students of the College." The magazine is mailed out to all alumni of William & Mary to further promote conducting research at the school. | [26] | |
The Throne | 2002 | Still active | A monthly newsletter created by the staff of Swem Library that is posted inside the library's bathroom stalls. The idea for The Throne was borrowed from "Stall Talk" of the University of Virginia libraries. | [27] | — |
William & Mary News | ? | Still active | It's published by the Office of University Relations as a service to the greater College community. It updates the College community on the administration's, faculty's, students' and staff's achievements. | [28] | |
William and Mary Quarterly | 1892 | Still active | This history journal was founded at the College of William & Mary in 1892. Since 1944 it has been published by the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture established by the College and the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation. | [29] |
The College of William & Mary is a public research university in Williamsburg, Virginia, United States. Founded in 1693 under a royal charter issued by King William III and Queen Mary II, it is the second-oldest institution of higher education in the United States and the ninth-oldest in the English-speaking world. It is classified among "R2: Doctoral Universities – High Research Activity". In his 1985 book Public Ivies: A Guide to America's Best Public Undergraduate Colleges and Universities, Richard Moll included William & Mary as one of the original eight "Public Ivies". The university is among the original nine colonial colleges.
The Flat Hat Club is the popular name of a collegiate secret society and honor fraternity founded in 1750 at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia.
Gene Ray Nichol, Jr. is an American lawyer and educator who served as the twenty-sixth president of the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, United States. He succeeded Timothy J. Sullivan and officially served from July 1, 2005, to February 12, 2008. It was the shortest tenure for a William & Mary president since the Civil War. During each year of his presidency, however, the college continued to break its own application records.
The Flat Hat is the official student newspaper at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. It prints Tuesdays during the College's academic year. It began printing twice-weekly in 2007; since its inception in 1911, The Flat Hat had printed weekly. It returned to weekly printing in 2015. In fall 2020, The Flat Hat began printing biweekly due to restrictions associated with the COVID-19 pandemic. The Flat Hat staff operates out of its office in William and Mary's Sadler Center.
The Virginia Informer was a student-run publication at The College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. The newspaper contained five sections: News, Features, Sports, Arts & Culture, and Opinion. It was a member of the Collegiate Network and a member of the Associated Collegiate Press.
The Earl Gregg Swem Library is located on Landrum Drive at the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. The library is named for Earl Gregg Swem, College Librarian from 1920-1944. In 2008, the Princeton Review rated William & Mary's library system as the eighth best in the United States. The ranking was based on a survey of 120,000 students from 368 campuses nationwide.
Earl Gregg Swem was an American historian, bibliographer and librarian. Swem worked at the Library of Congress and Virginia State Library, and for more than two decades was primary librarian at the College of William & Mary, where the Earl Gregg Swem Library was named in his honor.
The SS William and Mary was a Victory ship built during World War II.
The Seven Society, Order of the Crown & Dagger is the longest continually active secret society of the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. The clandestine, yet altruistic group is said to consist of seven senior individuals, selected in their junior year. While, historically, graduating members formally announced their identities each spring, today's membership is steeped in mystery and is only revealed upon a member's death.
The Wolf Law Library is located at the College of William & Mary's School of Law in Williamsburg, Virginia, United States. It contains a 380,000 volume collection and is a member of the Consortium of Southeastern Law Libraries.
The history of the College of William & Mary can be traced back to a 1693 royal charter establishing "a perpetual College of Divinity, Philosophy, Languages, and the good arts and sciences" in the British Colony of Virginia. It fulfilled an early colonial vision dating back to 1618 to construct a university level program modeled after Cambridge and Oxford at Henricus. A plaque on the Wren Building, the college's first structure, ascribes the institution's origin to "the college proposed at Henrico." It was named for the reigning joint monarchs of Great Britain, King William III and Queen Mary II. The selection of the new college's location on high ground at the center ridge of the Virginia Peninsula at the tiny community of Middle Plantation is credited to its first President, Reverend Dr. James Blair, who was also the Commissary of the Bishop of London in Virginia. A few years later, the favorable location and resources of the new school helped Dr. Blair and a committee of 5 students influence the House of Burgesses and Governor Francis Nicholson to move the capital there from Jamestown. The following year, 1699, the town was renamed Williamsburg.
The William & Mary Police Department (WMPD) is a nationally accredited police department with jurisdiction over the College of William & Mary located in Williamsburg, Virginia, United States. The department's accreditation with the Virginia Law Enforcement Professional Standards Commission was awarded on February 9, 2001. The department was again accredited in 2019.
WMTV is the student-run television station at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, United States. It plays syndicated television shows, movies and original student-created productions. It was founded in 2001 by Ross Johnston as a spin-off of the College's Student Information Network.
A number of secret societies operate at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, dating back to the founding of the nation's first known collegiate secret society, The F. H. C. Society, founded on November 11, 1750. Today several secret societies are known to exist at the college, including Bishop James Madison Society, the Flat Hat Club, the Ladies of Alpha, the Live Oak Society, the Phi Society, the Seven Society, the Society, the 13 Club, the W Society, the Wren Society, and the Zodiac Society.
I Am the College of William and Mary was written in 1945 by Dr. Dudley W. Woodbridge, esteemed professor (1927-1966) and inaugural dean of the revived Law School at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. The narrative poem recounts William & Mary's historic legacy as the seventh oldest college in the English-speaking world.
The William & Mary Pep Band is the scramble band of the College of William and Mary. It is a student-run ensemble that performs at home football games in the fall sports season and basketball games in the winter sports season. Membership is open to anyone currently enrolled at the college.
Robert Saunders Jr. was an American politician and school administrator who served as president of the College of William and Mary from 1847 to 1848. Prior to that, Saunders served as professor of mathematics from 1833 to 1847. He also served as a Virginia state senator from 1852 to 1858 and as mayor of Williamsburg, Virginia in 1859 and 1868 as well as the head of Eastern State Hospital. His family papers are held by the Special Collections Research Center at the College of William and Mary.
Davis Young Paschall was the twenty second president of the College of William & Mary, serving from 1960 to 1971. Prior to that, he served as Superintendent of Public Instruction for the Commonwealth of Virginia from 1957 to 1960, during the state-decreed period of Massive Resistance. During his superintendency public schools in the state were closed by gubernatorial and legislative fiat and subsequently, Dr. Paschall took steps to reopen those schools during the federal requirements. His papers from his time as president of the College of William & Mary can be found in the Special Collections Research Center at the College of William & Mary.
Thomas Ashley Graves Jr. was an American academic who was the twenty-third president of the College of William & Mary, serving from 1971 to 1985. He next served as director of the Winterthur Museum, Garden and Library from 1985 to 1992. His personal papers as well as his papers from his time as president of the College of William & Mary, are held by the Special Collections Research Center at the College of William & Mary.
The College of William & Mary has maintained a campus in what is now Williamsburg, Virginia, since 1693. The cornerstone of the Wren Building, then known as the College Building and the oldest surviving academic building in the United States, was laid in 1695. The college's 18th-century campus includes the College Building, the President's House, and Brafferton–all of which were constructed using slave labor. These buildings were altered and damaged during the succeeding centuries before receiving significant restorations by the Colonial Williamsburg program during the 1920s and 1930s.
As of this edit, this article uses content from "The Owl, The Scalper, The Taverner, Sleuth" , which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed.