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University Archives
The University Archives houses the official and unofficial records of William and Mary. These records may be in any format, e.g. microfilm, manuscripts, photographs, printed material, and books. The list below is a highlight of the archives materials most pertinent to the Civil War. More detailed information on the archives books and theses listed below can be accessed through the library's database, LION. The bulk of archives materials, however, are catalogued in card catalogues in the Special Collections Department. If you are interested in something specific or have any questions, please contact us.
The outbreak of the Civil War found Williamsburg with a population of 1600 citizens. Some sixty young men attended the College of William and Mary. Benjamin S. Ewell, president of the College, and a West Point graduate, was elected captain of the College militia when war fever swept the campus in January 1861. But Ewell, a Unionist, forbade the students from flying a Confederate flag over the Wren Building. After Virginia seceded, Ewell offered his services on 23 April to the Commonwealth and Robert E. Lee appointed him major of volunteers.
Many students left school to enlist at home so the faculty voted to close the College on 10 May 1861. The town soon became crowded with Confederate troops defending the Peninsula who used college buildings as hospitals. The Battle of Williamsburg was a rear guard action fought in rain and mud on 5 May 1862. The fight was a tactical draw, and the Confederates continued their retreat toward Richmond. Williamsburg was occupied by Federal troops for the remainder of the war.
On 9 September 1862, the Wren Building was almost totally consumed by a fire set by members of the 5th Pennsylvania Cavalry Regiment. Some other buildings and enclosures belonging to the College also were destroyed and those not so destroyed were held by the Union Army from May 1862 until September 1865. In 1893, $64,000 was appropriated by Congress to the College for "the destruction of its buildings and other property without authority by soldiers of the United States during the late war."
- Godson, Susan H. et al. The College of William and Mary: a History. 2 vols. Williamsburg: King and Queen Press, 1993. LD 6051 W52 C65 1993
- Kale, Wilford. Hark Upon the Gale: an Illustrated History of the College of William and Mary. Norfolk: Donning Co., 1985. LD 6051 W52 K35 1985
- Chapman, Anne W. Benjamin Stoddert Ewell: A Biography. PhD Dissertation, College of William and Mary, 1984. Archives LD 6051 W5m Hist 1984 C33
- Kettenburg, Carol Ann. The Battle of Williamsburg. M.A. Thesis, College of William and Mary, 1980. Archives LD 6051 W5m Hist 1980 K47
- Benjamin Stoddert Ewell Papers, Archives Acc. 1980.130. Includes deposition of William Reynolds; telegram, 10 October 1862, inquiring whether Ewell can be allowed through Union lines to inspect the College as well as letters from U.S. Grant, George Meade, O.O. Howard, Ambrose Burnside, William T. Sherman and George B. McClellan supporting efforts to rebuild the College. See also Benjamin S. Ewell in the Manuscripts and Rare Books Department.
- Faculty Minutes, especially 10 May 1861 and 5 July 1865. Ewell's report to the Board of Visitors on the conditions of the College was made 5 July 1865. It contains details of the various uses of college buildings by Union troops, subsequent damage, estimates of losses in property, the financial status of the College and the situation of the faculty.
- Pen and ink drawing of Fort Magruder and the College during the Battle of Williamsburg. Archives Acc. 1992.6
- Color engraving of Wren Building in use as a hospital in Subject File under Buildings and Grounds--Wren Building
- Faculty/Alumni file of Alexander Tinsley includes orders and amnesty oath.
- Faculty/Alumni File of Edmund Ruffin, alumnus and member of the Board of Visitors.
- Faculty/Alumni File of Richard Alsop Wise contains letter, 9 January 1861, concerning the College on the eve of the war.
- Faculty/Alumni File of Edward S. Joynes contains letter, 5 November 1863..
- College Papers, Folder 283, item 3, is a list of stocks and bonds owned by the College during the Civil War.
- Photographs of Thomas J. Stubbs (Photograph File P1980.75) and Dr. Alexander Tinsley (Photograph File P1979.769 and 769a). Tinsley's photograph was taken after Battle of Antietam.
- Appeal of the College of William and Mary in Virginia. Worcester: Printed by Tyler & Seagrave, [1875?] Archives LD 6501 W493 C575
- College of William and Mary. A Memorial of the College of William and Mary to the Legislature of Virginia. . . . Richmond: Enquirer Steam Presses, 1870. Archives LD 6051 W493 C6
- Ewell, Benjamin Stoddert. Remarks of Prof. Benjamin S. Ewell, . . . before the Committee of Education and Labor . . . January 24, 1872. . . for relief on account of destruction . . . during the rebellion. [Washington? 1872?] Archives LD 6051 W493E78
- _____. Letter to Hon. L.W.Perce, M.D. [1872?] Archives LD 6051 W493E75
- _____. Remarks . . . before Committee of Education and Labor. . . . [Washington? 1874] Archives LD 6051 W493E8
- _____. Remarks . . . before Committee of Education and Labor . . . . [Washington? 1876?] Archives LD 6051 W493E82
- Hawley, John Baldwin. Speech of Hon. John B. Hawley, of Illinois, in the House of Representatives, February 24, 1872. Washington: Congressional Globe Office, 1872. Archives LD 6051 W493H3
- Loring, George Bailey. Speech of Hon. George B. Loring, of Massachusetts, in the House of Representatives, April 12, 1878. Washington: 1878. Archives LD 6051 W493L6
- Stone, William Joel. College of William and Mary, Virginia: Report, Mr. Stone. [189?] Archives LD 6051 W493S8
- History of the College in House Report #12, 45th Congress, 2nd Session, December 5, 1877 in Subject File under History of the College--Reconstruction
