Wren Building

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Template:Refimprove Template:Short descriptionScript error: No such module "Infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Template:Campus of William & Mary The Wren Building is a building on the campus of the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, considered the oldest academic building still standing and in use in the United States,[1][2]

Situated in Old College Yard[3]Template:Rp[4] of William & Mary's "Ancient Campus", the Wren Building is centrally located with its forecourt defined by two further historic structures, Brafferton (built in 1723 as an Indian school) and the President's House (completed in 1733).[4]

The Wren Building was designated a National Historic Landmark on October 9, 1960,[5] and has appeared in the Virginia Landmarks Register since September 9, 1969.[4]

Building history

Initial construction

The cornerstone of the first building on this site was laid on August 8, 1695,[6][4][3] and construction was completed four years later.[4][3] While many details regarding the matter are unknown, an undated modern Wren House informational placard states that the "building was made by the labor of enslaved individuals... possibl[y] including... enslaved children..." and that the same labor was used "to run the College, most likely assisting with cleaning, cooking, gardening, tending livestock, etc."[7]Template:Better source

The college named the building in honor of the English architect Sir Christopher Wren,Template:Fact after Hugh Jones—a Reverend and William and Mary mathematics professorTemplate:Fact—wrote in his Present State of Virginia (1724) that it was “first modelled by Sir Christopher Wren, adapted to the nature of the country by the gentlemen there”;[4] however, it is unknown how Jones came to this conclusion, since there are no actual documents tying Wren to the building's design, and he never even visited North America.[8]Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

The College (with its sole Wren Building structure) was critical to Williamsburg becoming the new capital of Virginia,Script error: No such module "Unsubst".Template:Fact after William and Mary students made speeches on May 1, 1699 from The College (Wren Building), stating that they would help build the town to its full potential.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".[9]Script error: No such module "Unsubst". After the destruction of Virginia's former capital of Jamestown, Virginia's legislature met in the building's Great Hall as a temporary meeting place (1700-1704), while the Capitol was under construction.Template:Fact As early as Christmas 1702, students—termed "Scholars"—are noted, in affidavit, as occupying the building (a fact known from an episode in which they had barricaded the Grammar School doors, followed by an attempt by others to break in, with the firing of shots by the Scholars).[10]Template:Better source

Fires and reconstructions

File:Wren 1859 william and mary.jpg
The building in 1859 with Italianate towers

The building was gutted by a fire in 1705, started by accident in a basement in the North Wing of the building.[11] Reconstruction after this fire, commanded by Governor Alexander Spotswood, was completed by 1716 with partial funds from Queen Anne.

A second fire ravaged the building in 1859, and when it was rebuilt, the Wren Building was rebuilt in the Italianate style. In this fire, a man at the school accused the enslaved people of starting the fire, due to their use of candlelight. However, another man defended the enslaved individuals, stating that he had seen their candle go out prior to the fire.[12]

A third fire was set intentionally by Union troops during the Civil War in 1862. Each reconstruction incorporated the surviving exterior walls, but the overall look of the building has varied considerably over time.Template:Fact

Colonial Williamsburg restoration

The Wren Building was the first major building restored or reconstructed by John D. Rockefeller Jr., after he and the Reverend Dr. W.A.R. Goodwin began Colonial Williamsburg's restoration in the late 1920s.[4] The building's was restored in the 20th century by Boston architects Perry Shaw & Hepburn.Template:Citation needed lead Perry Shaw & Hepburn's restoration reflects the building's historic appearance from its reconstruction in 1716 after a 1705 fire to 1859, when it burned again.Template:Citation needed lead

Architecture

The building is constructed as it currently stands out of red brick, in the style of Flemish and English Bond Script error: No such module "Unsubst". (as was typical for official buildings in 17th- and 18th-century Williamsburg).Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Its rebuilding, despite modifications, generally were "within the original walls", as "walls surviv[ing]... were incorporated in the rebuildings".[4] It has contained classrooms, offices, a refectory known as the Great Hall, and a kitchen,Script error: No such module "Unsubst".Script error: No such module "Unsubst". and a chapel, which was added as a south wing in 1732.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The crypt beneath the chapel is the resting place of several notable Virginians, including royal governor the 4th Baron Botetourt, Speaker of the House of Burgesses Sir John Randolph, and his son Peyton Randolph, Founding Father and first President of the Continental Congress.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

On the top of the building is a weather vane with the number 1693, the year the College was founded.Template:Citation needed lead In the early 1770s, plans were drawn up to complete the building as a quadrangle; alumnus Thomas Jefferson (class of 1762) drew up a floorplan which was submitted to Governor Dunmore, and foundations were laid in 1774.Template:Citation needed lead The looming American Revolutionary War halted further construction, and the fourth wing was never completed.Template:Citation needed lead The foundations, however, still exist and were uncovered during excavations in 2014.[13]Template:Better source

The first and second floors of the building are still open for public viewing; the Spotswood Society—named after Virginia governor Alexander Spotswood—offers guided tours of the building when William and Mary classes are in-session.[14] The Spotswood Society also offers a virtual tour.[15]Template:Full

Historic setting

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File:Wren Building, College of William and Mary (drawing by Franz Ludwig Michel, 1702).jpg
Earliest known drawing of the building by Swiss traveler François-Louis Michel, 1702

After the completion of the President's House and the added chapel wing in 1732, the College's layout and overall architectural organization changed little until the construction of additional academic buildings in the early-twentieth century. For nearly one hundred and fifty years, the campus consisted of the three buildings—the Wren Building, the Brafferton, and the President's House—proportionally arranged in the College yard. With the Wren Building (or "College" as it was called) placed in the middle and bounded by the Brafferton to the south and the President's House to the north, the view gave visitors a sense of balance and proportion, important tenets of the Enlightenment and visible in Jacobean, Anglo-Dutch, and Georgian architecture of the period. To complete the view, a formal geometric garden of hedge rows, topiaries, planting beds, and marl paths was laid out in the College yard facing Duke of Gloucester Street, and a botanical and scientific garden was laid in the back, which led to acres of woodlands and streams. Archaeological and historical evidence points to the formal garden in the front having been destroyed by the late-eighteenth century. Plans drawn up by French engineers of Williamsburg in 1782 show plain rectangular beds ornamenting the front, and later nineteenth-century engravings and photographs show rows of trees and even cows lounging in the College yard. Any remaining physical trace of the gardens were finally obliterated in 1862, when massive earthworks were built during the Siege of Williamsburg. However, the Brafferton Building was most likely facing the opposite way and was therefore excluded from this garden area.

File:Bodleian Plate.jpg
The "Bodleian Plate", ca. 1747, was used during the restoration of the Wren Building (top row and middle of center row) in the early 20th century.

Recorded descriptions of the grounds appearance are few. One possible view was discovered in the late-1920s when researchers discovered a ca. 1747 printing plate in England's Bodleian Library depicting Williamsburg landmarks, including the College. Although this "Bodleian Plate" served as the blueprint for the Wren Building's restoration in the 1920s and 1930s, little was known about the plate's authenticity with regard to the gardens until College archaeologists and students began digging for evidence in 2005. Since these initial archaeological discoveries, the Bodleian Plate has proved remarkably faithful in its depiction of the College yard's early garden layout.[16]

Although the two side structures are not entirely balanced (there is a slight size discrepancy between the Brafferton and President's House), the sight of the College would have been impressive for an 18th-century Virginian. Native- and foreign-born visitors alike marveled at the College's design.

Uses of the building

According to an undated modern Wren House informational placard, "[u]ntil at least 1724, students, administrators, faculty, and staff, including slaves and their families, lived in th[e] building [now called Wren]";[10]Template:Better source in addition, they studied and attended religious services in the building.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".Template:Fact

When the Capitol burned in 1747, the legislature moved back into the building until the Capitol was reconstructed in 1754. The building also housed a grammar school and an Indian school, which was moved to the Brafferton building, in 1723. The building was used as a military hospital by the French during the American Revolutionary War and by the Confederacy during the American Civil War.

The Wren Building today has historical and ceremonial importance in addition to its academic use. Each year during the opening convocation ceremony, incoming William and Mary freshmen enter the building from the courtyard, pass through the central hall, and exit on the opposite side. As seniors, students pass through the building in the opposite direction on their way to the graduation ceremony. The Yule Log Ceremony, the College's holiday celebration, is held every year at the Wren Building, typically during the second weekend in December. Each fall incoming freshmen take the school's Honor Code Pledge in the building's Great Hall.[17] The Bishop James Madison Society, the College's second-oldest secret society, is rumored to meet in the Wren Building.[18]

Slavery

File:Heart Memorial to the Enslaved in daylight, 2022.jpg
Hearth: Memorial to the Enslaved viewed facing the Wren Building, 2022

Following the usage of enslaved labor in the construction of the Wren Building, enslaved persons were utilized in a variety of roles by the college, including as chefs, gardeners, and laborers.[19] These enslaved men and women were most likely overseen by one specific man, or perhaps the housekeeper.[20] The building of the Wren Building was also funded by enslaved labor, since the funds for William and Mary that were provided in the 1693 royal charter were funds from a tobacco plantation.

Enslaved individuals were also a means of revenue. When William & Mary lost its funding from the monarchy because of the American Revolution, the Virginia Gazette published a statute passed at a meeting of the Board of Visitors which emphasized how the Visitors intended to use the sale of slaves to compensate for this loss of funding: "A sufficient number of slaves shall be reserved for cleaning the College; and if any remain after such reservation, and hiring of the slaves belonging to the garden and kitchen, as aforesaid, they shall be hired out at publick auction." In the early part of the nineteenth century, the College gave its few slaves a dollar each for Christmas, and it is known from the record that the dollars were mailed to each slave as the College also paid postage. William & Mary itself owned a plantation, the Nottoway Quarter, which ran on enslaved labor, starting in 1718 with seventeen enslaved people. The proceeds from the sale of tobacco helped to fund the College and scholarships. It was sold in 1802.[21]

The Spotswood Society works with the Lemon Project: A Journey of Reconciliation, which is a project created in 2009 in an attempt to "rectify wrongs perpetrated against African Americans by the College through action or inaction."[22] A display discussing the college's ties with slavery was erected in the building's information center in 2019. A bronze tablet also was erected to honor those who fought in the Civil War, replacing the 1914 marble plaque that listed the names of only the students and faculty who fought in the Confederacy. The new marble plaque contains all the names of the Union and Confederate soldiers.[23]

Burials

Sir John Randolph, a Speaker of the House of Burgesses, an Attorney General for the Colony of Virginia, and the youngest son of William Randolph and Mary Isham, was interred at the chapel of the Wren Building after his death in 1737.[24] After the burial vaults were disturbed in the 1859 fire, a physician who examined the contents of Randolph's tomb discovered the bones of Randolph and an unknown second person.[24]

Botetourt statue

Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". Popular Virginia Governor Norborne Berkeley, 4th Baron Botetourt, better known as Lord Botetourt, who died in office in 1770 and had been a member of the College's Board of Visitors, was buried in the crypt under the building's chapel. A statue of Lord Botetourt was acquired by William and Mary in 1797 and moved to the campus from the former Capitol building in 1801. Previously displayed in the piazza of the Capitol Building at the opposite end of Duke of Gloucester Street, the statue was a landmark in front of the building for several centuries. After years of weathering, it was removed in 1958 and in 1966 was placed in its new location inside the College's Swem Library. In 1993, as the College celebrated its Tercentenary (300th anniversary), a new statue of Lord Botetourt, created in bronze by William and Mary alumnus Gordon Kray, was installed in the College Yard, in the place occupied for so many years by the original.[25]

Priorities of the College

File:Priorities of the College (W&M).jpg
The plaque

A large plaque was presented by the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities in 1914 which lists some of the notable firsts for William and Mary:Template:Fact

  • First college in the United States, the claim being that its antecedents go back to the college proposed at Henrico (1619).
  • First American college to receive its charter from the Crown under the Seal of the Privy Council, in 1693. Hence it was known as "their Majesties' Royal College of William and Mary."
  • First and only American college to receive a colonial Coat-of-Arms from the College of Arms in London, 1694.
  • First college in the United States to have a full Faculty, consisting of a President, six Professors, usher; and writing master, 1729.
  • First college to confer medallic prizes; the gold medals donated by Lord Botetourt in 1771.
  • First college to establish an inter-collegiate fraternity, the Phi Beta Kappa, December 5, 1776.
  • First college to have the Elective system of study, 1779.
  • First college to have the Honor System (inked by Thomas Jefferson), 1779.
  • First college to become a University, 1779.
  • First college to have a school of Modern Languages, 1779.
  • First college to include Fine Arts in a professorship, 1779.
  • First college to have a school of Municipal and Constitutional Law, 1779.
  • First college to teach Political Economy, 1784.
  • First college to have a school of Modern History, 1803.

See also

Further reading

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References

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External links

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