User:Smith120bh/Dartmouth Seal

Way too much detail in here to be worth it, but it's some amazing research, and hereby preserved here for potential future use/reference.
Preserved when deleted from Dartmouth College, 11:55, 2007-09-19: [1].

Seal edit

Dartmouth College received a royal charter on December 13, 1769 through New Hampshire's colonial governor John Wentworth. The charter required a seal that was to be:


Nevertheless, on March 13, 1770, founder Eleazar Wheelock wrote the trustees of the English fund that was supporting the College (rather than the American trustees of the institution itself, as the charter stipulated) to suggest that his


The English trustees, including Lord Dartmouth, did not take up the suggestion. Evidence exists that they were annoyed with Wheelock's acquisition of a charter for a college; they were under the impression that the funds under their control were to be used to support Wheelock's efforts at educating and Christianizing Native Americans at Moor's Indian Charity School at Lebanon, Connecticut.[3] Wheelock then designed a seal for his college bearing a striking resemblance to the seal of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, a missionary society founded in London in 1701, in order to maintain the illusion that his college was more for mission work than for higher education. Wheelock arranged for Nathaniel Hurd, a Boston silversmith, to engrave the seal. Hurd had engraved many coats of arms and appears in a John Singleton Copley portrait of ca. 1765 with two books, one of which is A Display of Heraldry by John Guillim (1610).[4] Wheelock wrote to Governor Wentworth on May 22, 1772, 'I hope that Mr Hurd will have the College Seal compleated by Commencement."[5] The seal (a single-sided "female" die used to form impressions in wax) was ready by Commencement of 1773, and Portsmouth resident and former Chief Justice and Treasurer of the Province of New Hampshire George Jaffrey donated it to the College. The trustees officially accepted the seal on August 25, 1773, describing it as:


Former College Librarian William Woodward hid the seal from Dartmouth's officers along with the charter and four account books after the state of New Hampshire purported to take over the operation of Dartmouth College (and purported to make Woodward Treasurer of Dartmouth University). The Dartmouth College Case named Woodward as the defendant and technically sought to recover the items that he had hidden.[7] The College's success in the Supreme Court returned the seal to its possession and extinguished the University.

In 1876, the College switched from having its seal impress wax to having it impress paper. This required a second, "male" die to fit under the original.[3] The seal design was carved in sandstone on the exterior of Rollins Chapel at its construction in 1886, and in wood above the fireplace of Collis Commonground (originally "Commons") at its construction in 1901.[8]

On October 28, 1926, the trustees affirmed the charter's reservation of the seal for official corporate documents alone.[3] The College Publications Committee under Ray Nash commissioned typographer W. A. Dwiggins to create a line drawing version of the seal in 1940 that saw widespread use.

Dwiggins' design was modified during 1957 to change the date from "1770" to "1769," to accord with the date of the College Charter. The trustees commissioned a new set of dies with a date of "1769" to replace the old dies, now badly worn after almost two hundred years of use.[3] The 1957 design continues to be used under trademark number 2305032.[9]

Shield edit

On October 28, 1926, the Trustees approved a "Dartmouth College Shield" for general use. Artist and engraver W. Parke Johnson designed this emblem on the basis of the shield that is depicted at the center of the original seal. This design does not survive. On June 9, 1944 the trustees approved another coat of arms based on the shield part of the seal, this one by Canadian artist and designer Thoreau MacDonald. That design was used widely and, like Dwiggins' seal, had its date changed from "1770" to "1769" around 1958.[3] That version continues to be used under trademark registration number 3112676 and others.[9]

College designer John Scotford made a stylized version of the shield during the 1960s, but it did not see the success of MacDonald's design.[10] The shield appears to have been used as the basis of the shield of the Dartmouth Medical School, and it has been reproduced in sizes as small as a few nanometers across.[11] The design has appeared on Rudolph Ruzicka's Bicentennial Medal (Philadelphia Mint, 1969) and elsewhere.

  1. ^ "The Charter of Dartmouth College". Dartmo. Retrieved 2007-01-24.
  2. ^ Dartmouth College Library, Special Collections MS 770213.2
  3. ^ a b c d e Good, Jonathan (April 1997). "Notes from the Special Collections: The Dartmouth College Seal". Dartmouth College Library Bulletin. Retrieved 2007-01-24.
  4. ^ Coppley, John Singleton (c. 1765). "Portrait of Nathaniel Hurd". Cleveland Museum of Art. Retrieved 2007-09-16.
  5. ^ Hoefnagel, Dick (November 1995). "Journey to Hanover, 1771". Dartmouth College Library Bulletin. No. NS 36. Dartmouth College Library. Retrieved 2007-01-24. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ Dartmouth College, Trustees' Records, 1:26. Dartmouth College Library, Special Collections, DA-1.
  7. ^ "Trustees of Dartmouth College vs. Woodward, 17 U.S. 518 (1819)". Cornell Law School Legal Information Institute. Retrieved 2007-01-24.
  8. ^ "View of the Commons". Dartmo. Retrieved 2007-09-13.
  9. ^ a b "United States Patent and Trademark Office". Retrieved 2007-01-24.
  10. ^ Good, Jonathan. "A Proposal for a Heraldic Coat of Arms for Dartmouth College". Jonathan Good's homepage. Retrieved 2007-01-24.
  11. ^ Nabity, Joe. "Nanometer Pattern Generation System: Dartmouth Seal". Dartmouth College. Retrieved 2007-01-24.