Where America's builders are built

A message from: William & Mary

William & Mary
As America reflects on its 250th anniversary, the milestone has special resonance in Philadelphia, a city where the nation's founding story is part of the streetscape.
- But the moment is more than a commemoration of the past. It's a chance to ask what kind of nation we hope to become — and who will help build it.
The story: Before some of the nation's early leaders gathered in Philadelphia to shape a republic, William & Mary, the Alma Mater of the Nation, was helping prepare the builders who would carry those ideas forward.
- That gives the university a singular place in America's founding story. Its history provides credibility, but its mission remains focused on tomorrow.
Why it's important: At a time when students and families are looking for universities that combine academic excellence with meaningful outcomes, William & Mary demonstrates that history and innovation are not opposing ideas.
What you need to know: William & Mary is known as the Alma Mater of the Nation — a distinction tied to its role in educating generations of leaders whose ideas and service helped shape the republic.
- Founded in 1693, the university predates the U.S. by more than 80 years.
Okay, but: William & Mary's greatest contribution is not simply what happened here centuries ago, but the generations of builders it continues to prepare.
Students choose the university for close faculty mentorship, free inquiry and debate, hands-on research opportunities and a community that calls them toward lives of meaning and impact.
- Its graduates go on to help build institutions, industries and communities across business, government, science, education, the arts and public service.
- Notable alumni include Emmy and Academy Award winners, a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, championship-winning coaches, entrepreneurs and influential C-suite executives across major U.S. companies.
The proof: That future-facing mission is grounded in a long history of educating leaders who shaped American life.
- Thomas Jefferson studied at the university, where his influential mentor and professor William Small introduced him to Enlightenment ideas and to Founding Father George Wythe.
- While at William & Mary, Wythe became America's first law professor, establishing the nation's first law school and mentoring the builders of the justice system, including U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall.
- Across generations, William & Mary has educated four U.S. presidents (including George Washington, who was the school's first American chancellor), four Supreme Court justices and more than 100 members of Congress.
Plus, plus, plus: The university's history is still visible on campus. The Wren Building — the oldest academic building in the nation — is still in active use today, and is a physical link to centuries of American inquiry, debate and leadership.
The takeaway: America's 250th anniversary is a chance to revisit the places that shaped the country — and the places still shaping its future.
William & Mary offers both: a campus where founding-era history, civic leadership and student life intersect.

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