Lewis and Clark College

Oregon

1867

Formerly “Albany College”

lewis clark seal
lewis clark
official hood lining pattern
orange
black

The president of Albany College (who was a graduate of Princeton) chose orange and black as Albany’s colors in the 1890s.

Citations in the World Almanac (listed by cover date; color information is from the previous year): orange/black (1917-1935)

A photograph of a master's hood lined with two colors divided per chevron from a 1939 E.R. Moore catalogue by Helen Walters entitled The Story of Caps and Gowns.
A photograph of a master's hood lined with two colors divided per chevron from a 1939 E.R. Moore catalogue entitled The Story of Caps and Gowns by Helen Walters.
An Albany College jacket patch from the 1930s.

The chevron was by far the most common heraldic division the Intercollegiate Bureau of Academic Costume (IBAC) employed to divide the two or three colors in an institution’s hood, but beginning in 1895 the “parti per chevron” was also used quite frequently. Here the two school colors were placed in the hood lining one above the other, with the division between them following the shape of a chevron. Later the IBAC began to use a per reversed chevron division and a division per bar on rare occasions. Confusingly, in IBAC lists from 1927 and 1948, a number of hoods were described as “[color] above [color]” or “[color] over [color]” which referred either to a hood lining divided per chevron, per reversed chevron, or per bar, and today it is not usually known which of these three patterns the IBAC intended to describe.

The IBAC assigned Albany College a hood lined “black above orange” no later than 1927, according to an IBAC list from that period. This description did not change in IBAC lists from 1948 and 1972. The division of the two colors can be ascertained from a list compiled by Kevin Sheard in Academic Heraldry in America (1962), which described the hood lining of Lewis & Clark College as black and Princeton orange, divided per chevron.