Washington College

Maryland

1782

washington college seal 2
washington college
official hood lining pattern
maroon
black

The students of Washington College selected maroon and black as their school colors in 1887.

Citations in the World Almanac (listed by cover date; color information is from the previous year): maroon/black (1917-1931)

A 1902 painting from Cotrell & Leonard of a doctoral hood lined with a single chevron.
A 1902 painting from Cotrell & Leonard of a doctoral hood with a similar lining pattern.
A felt pennant from the 1930s.

On 16 May 1895, the Intercollegiate Commission on Academic Costume approved a uniform system of academic costume for American colleges and universities called the “Intercollegiate Code of Academic Costume”. The Intercollegiate Code stipulated that the college color or colors of the institution granting the degree would be used in the lining of the institution’s hood but did not define how multiple colors would be combined in the hood lining. One of the advisors to the Commission was Gardner Cotrell Leonard, the Director of the Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume (IBAC), an organization affiliated with the academic costume manufacturing firm Cotrell & Leonard. Since 1887 the IBAC had maintained a database of information about academic regalia in the US and Europe, so the Commission entrusted the IBAC with the responsibility of assigning a unique hood lining design to every college and university that chose to adopt the Intercollegiate Code.

The Commission sent a copy of the Intercollegiate Code along with a list of schools and their colors to the Living Church Quarterly, which included this information in its 1896 edition (published in December 1895). The list of college colors the Commission appended to the Intercollegiate Code was largely copied from the 1894 World Almanac. But some colleges and universities in the Commission’s list did not appear in the World Almanac, so information about these colors was probably supplied by Cotrell & Leonard from their client records. The Commission’s list of college colors represented the first attempt by the IBAC to create a record of hood linings used by American colleges and universities, but unfortunately the list did not identify which institutions on the list had actually applied to the IBAC for a hood lining assignment, nor did it describe the heraldic patterns the IBAC used to divide the colors within those hoods. Nevertheless, it seems reasonable to assume that the IBAC assigned hood lining designs to the clients of Cotrell & Leonard in the Commission’s list as early as 1895 or within a few years after that.

The maroon and black colors of Washington College in Maryland appeared in the Commission’s list but not in the 1894 World Almanac, which means Cotrell & Leonard probably supplied this color information to the Commission. And since Washington was a client of that firm, the IBAC is likely to have registered a hood lining pattern for the college in 1895 or 1896. It is not known how the IBAC divided Washington’s colors, but the first complete IBAC description of the college’s hood was in a 1927 list, where the hood was stated to have a maroon lining with a black chevron. This description did not change in subsequent IBAC hood lists.