Government
From Special Collections Research Center Wiki
"The Government Department at the College of William and Mary provides students with opportunities to investigate political phenomena ranging from the behavior of the individual citizen to relations among states in the international arena. The program seeks to develop awareness of the moral and ethical implications of political action as well as understanding of political institutions and processes from an empirical perspective." [1]
In 1888, after William and Mary was reorganized, the teaching of government was included in the Department of Moral Science, Political Economy, and Civil Government. President Lyon G. Tyler served as the head of the department. In 1907, according to Warner Moss, government (political science) received a separate listing but it was not until 1920, with the arrival of Professor Robert Kent Gooch, that Government would formally be taught at William and Mary.(Moss) The Marshall-Wythe School of Government and Citizenship was established in 1929, with Professor John Garland Pollard as dean and professor of government.(Moss) It is not clear as to when the Department of Government became a department of its own, although in 1938 it is identified as a department.
Margaret L. Hamilton was the Chair of the Department of Government from 1973-1978 and she also acted in that capacity in 1968-1969, making her one of the first women department chairs at William and Mary.(BOV resolution marking her retirement, April 25, 1986) Margaret L. Hamilton's appointments: Acting Assistant Professor of Government, 1953-1955; Assistant Assistant Professor of Government, 1955-1964; Associate Professor of Government, 1964-1969; Professor of Government, 1969-1986; Professor of Government, Emerita, 1986.
The Department of Government has been located in Morton Hall since 1973.
References
- Department of Government, http://web.wm.edu/government/?fetchid=6450, accessed 19 February 2009.
- Warner Moss, "Government at William and Mary," Alumni Gazette 9.2 (1941): 10-11, 25-27. University Archives Subject File, Special Collections Research Center, Earl Gregg Swem Library, College of William and Mary.
