Florida State University

Florida

1851

Formerly “Florida State College”, “Florida Female College”, and then “Florida State College for Women”

official hood lining pattern
A Florida State College for Women pennant from 1945.
garnet
gold

The original colors of Florida State College were purple and gold. In 1905, when the University of Florida was established as the state men’s college and Florida State College became the state women’s college known as Florida Female College, the students of Florida Female college voted to change their school colors to crimson and gold. The administration was fond of purple because the men’s football team had won championship games the previous two years wearing purple and gold, so they combined purple with crimson to produce garnet, which became one of the official school colors of the college along with gold.

Citations in the World Almanac (listed by cover date; color information is from the previous year): garnet/gold (1916-1935)

The Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume (IBAC) described the hood lining of Florida State College for Women as garnet with a gold chevron in a 1927 list, a description that did not change in any IBAC list thereafter. Unfortunately this was a duplication of the hood the IBAC had earlier assigned to Winthrop University.

To resolve this problem, here the chevron of Florida State has been inverted, which was a heraldic solution to duplications of this sort the IBAC had been using since before 1927, though apparently not in this instance.