The Wren Building was the primary venue for law classes from January 1780 when Wythe became the first professor of law until it burned in 1859, shortly before the Civil War closed the College in 1861. Photograph was digitized by the Special Collections Research Center at the College of William & Mary.https://scholarship.law.wm.edu/buildingphotos/1003/thumbnail.jp
St. George Tucker, William & Mary\u27s second Professor of Law and Police, usually held classes in h...
In 1915, The Law School occupied the 27th and 28th floors of the Woolworth Building. Fordham Law acc...
White Hall was the first building erected on the Maine campus in 1867-68. It served as a dormitory, ...
The Wren Building was the primary venue for law classes from January 1780 when Wythe became the firs...
Built between 1834-1835, Marshall-Wythe Hall was built to house the Marshall-Wythe School of Governm...
The Old Gymnasium at the College of William & Mary opened in 1900 and was converted to a lecture roo...
George Wythe taught law to students in his house, which still stands on Palace Green, both before an...
Brafferton Hall was built in 1723 from the proceeds of the Brafferton estate and was used as an Indi...
Eighty years ago this month, in the early hours of December 16, 1934, Tucker Memorial Hall became en...
The first Law Building; picture ca.1865. Source: Bentley Historical Library. The Law Department was ...
Wren Building, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, circa 1915-1930. Caption reads: ...
Jordan & Anderson, architects. Completed in 1863. Served as Law School for 60 years; contained Uni...
Ivy Building. ca. 1890. When classes resumed at the University of Georgia after the Civil War, the l...
George Wythe served as the first Chair of Law and Police at the College of William and Mary from 177...
Classroom in first Law Building c. 1888. Source: Bentley Historical Library. Features a high ceiling...
St. George Tucker, William & Mary\u27s second Professor of Law and Police, usually held classes in h...
In 1915, The Law School occupied the 27th and 28th floors of the Woolworth Building. Fordham Law acc...
White Hall was the first building erected on the Maine campus in 1867-68. It served as a dormitory, ...
The Wren Building was the primary venue for law classes from January 1780 when Wythe became the firs...
Built between 1834-1835, Marshall-Wythe Hall was built to house the Marshall-Wythe School of Governm...
The Old Gymnasium at the College of William & Mary opened in 1900 and was converted to a lecture roo...
George Wythe taught law to students in his house, which still stands on Palace Green, both before an...
Brafferton Hall was built in 1723 from the proceeds of the Brafferton estate and was used as an Indi...
Eighty years ago this month, in the early hours of December 16, 1934, Tucker Memorial Hall became en...
The first Law Building; picture ca.1865. Source: Bentley Historical Library. The Law Department was ...
Wren Building, College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, Virginia, circa 1915-1930. Caption reads: ...
Jordan & Anderson, architects. Completed in 1863. Served as Law School for 60 years; contained Uni...
Ivy Building. ca. 1890. When classes resumed at the University of Georgia after the Civil War, the l...
George Wythe served as the first Chair of Law and Police at the College of William and Mary from 177...
Classroom in first Law Building c. 1888. Source: Bentley Historical Library. Features a high ceiling...
St. George Tucker, William & Mary\u27s second Professor of Law and Police, usually held classes in h...
In 1915, The Law School occupied the 27th and 28th floors of the Woolworth Building. Fordham Law acc...
White Hall was the first building erected on the Maine campus in 1867-68. It served as a dormitory, ...