PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Washington College
rdfs:comment
  • The college’s first president, the Reverend William Smith, was a prominent figure in colonial affairs of letters and church, and he had a wide acquaintance among the great men of colonial days including Benjamin Franklin. Joining General Washington on the Board of Visitors and Governors of the new college were such distinguished figures as U.S. Senator John Henry, Congressman Joshua Seney and his Excellency William Paca, Governor of Maryland. The Maryland legislature granted its first college charter upon Washington College in May 1782. The following spring, on May 14, 1783, the college held its first commencement.
owl:sameAs
long degrees
  • 76
Staff
  • 468
dcterms:subject
foaf:homepage
dbkwik:americanfootballdatabase/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
lat minutes
  • 13
Built
  • 1844
long seconds
  • 5
campus
Nickname
  • The Shoremen, The Shorewomen
Country
Name
  • Washington College
  • Middle, East and West Halls
Type
undergrad
  • 1350
postgrad
  • 100
locmapin
  • Maryland
Colors
  • Maroon and Black
long direction
  • W
President
endowment
  • 1.72E8
refnum
  • 79001138
added
  • 1979-09-06
Established
  • 1723
  • 1782
Governing body
  • Private
State
lat seconds
  • 2
long minutes
  • 4
Architect
  • Reynolds, Elija
City
Website
lat degrees
  • 39
lat direction
  • N
Location
  • Washington Ave, Chestertown, Maryland
abstract
  • The college’s first president, the Reverend William Smith, was a prominent figure in colonial affairs of letters and church, and he had a wide acquaintance among the great men of colonial days including Benjamin Franklin. Joining General Washington on the Board of Visitors and Governors of the new college were such distinguished figures as U.S. Senator John Henry, Congressman Joshua Seney and his Excellency William Paca, Governor of Maryland. The Maryland legislature granted its first college charter upon Washington College in May 1782. The following spring, on May 14, 1783, the college held its first commencement. With his election as first President of the United States, General Washington retired from the Board of Visitors and Governors and accepted the honorary degree of doctor of laws, which a delegation from Chestertown presented to him on June 24, 1789, in New York, then the seat of Congress. Since Washington’s last visit to campus, Washington College has hosted five U.S. presidents: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Harry S Truman, Dwight Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and George H. W. Bush. The original college building, opened in 1788, was destroyed by fire January 11, 1827. The oldest existing building — Middle Hall — was erected in 1844 on the site of the original college building. By 1860, Middle Hall was joined by East and West Halls. All three structures, known as the Hill Dorms, are on the Maryland Register of Historic Places.