. Bulletin du Collège de William et Mary--Virginia Educational Conference Edition . 766)Beverly EandolphJames MonroeJohn PageWilliam II CabellJohn Tyler^ Sr.Wilson Cary Nichols James P. PresonJohn TylerW. B. GilesL. W. TazewellWyndham RobertsonJohn M. Gregory juges de la Cour suprême John Marshall (1775)John Blair BusHROD Washington (1778)Philip P, Barbour 8 William and Mary College. Signataires de la déclaration d'indépendance George WytheThomas Jeffersoncarter Braxton (lYYY)Benjamin Harrison autres anciens éminents Spencer Boane et St. George Tucker^ juristes généraux Winfield Scott A.
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. Bulletin of the College of William and Mary--Virginia Educational Conference Edition . 766)Beverly EandolphJames MonroeJohn PageWilliam II. CabellJohn Tyler^ Sr.Wilson Cary NicholasJames P. PrestonJohn TylerW. B. GilesL. W. TazewellWyndham RobertsonJohn M. Gregory Judges of the Supreme Court John Marshall (1775)John Blair BusHROD Washington (1778)Philip P, Barbour 8 William and Mary College. Signers of Declaration of Independence George WytheThomas JeffersonCarter Braxton (lYYY)Benjamin Harrison Other Distinguished Alumni Spencer Boane and St. George Tucker^ Jurists Generals Winfield Scott and Wm. B. Taliaferro^ Soldiers Bishops Madison and Bandolph^ Clergymen James Barron Hope and James Lindsay Gordon^ Poets, etc. ^^Yea, to cherish forever the fire from heaven this fosteringflame was builtThat its rays might show through the centuries wherefreedoms well-springs lay;To nurse the hope for which the blood of the Martyrs of Godwas spiltIn the light that shineth more and more unto the perfectday/ —James Lindsay Gordon.(From a poem read at the College of William and Mary.). r^ William and Mary College. 9 /o^feB^ HE College of William and Mary is particularly for- £ tunate in its location. Within six miles of ancient ^QBv Jamestown and the James River, only twelve miles from historic Yorktown and itself teeming with storied associations, Williamsburg is yet in touch with the very heart of the Virginia of the present. Situated on the C. & 0. Railroad, the town is easily reached from Richmond or ITorfolk and is within half an hours ride of !N^ewport News. Here in former days was the seat of Virginia government;here the royal governors lived; here was the state house andthe famous Raleigh Tavern which was noted still in later times;Bruton Church, artistically restored, the old Powder Horn, thehomes of Wythe and Blair and Randolph, and scores of inter-esting things are to be seen in Williamsburg. In recent yearsthe town has become, more and more, an educational center,