
The Fitzrandolph Gates
The main entrance to the Campus from
Nassau Street was erected in 1905, from the design of McKim, Mead
and White, in fulfillment of a bequest from Augustus van Winkle,
of Hazleton, Pennsylvania, in memory of his ancestor, Nathaniel
FitzRandolph, who gave the land on which Nassau Hall was built.
FitzRandolph was the son of one of
the original seventeenth-century Quaker settlers of Princeton. More
than any other citizen of Princeton, he was responsible for raising
for the College the money and land the trustees required of the
citizens of the place where it was to be located -- $1000 New Jersey
money, ten acres of cleared land for the campus, and 200 acres of
woodland for fuel -- and thus enabled Princeton to win from its
chief competitor, New Brunswick, the honor and benefits of providing
the site of the college.
Besides riding among his neighbors
to solicit donations, FitzRandolph himself gave twenty pounds and
4Ç acres, described in the trustee minutes as ``a certain tract
of land four hundred feet front and thirty poles [rods] depth, in
line at right angles with the broad street where it is proposed
that the college shall be built.''
FitzRandolph took great interest in
the building of the college and recorded its progress in his journal:
July 29, 1754, ``Jos. Morrow set a man first to dig the college
cellar.'' September 17, 1754, ``the first cornerstone . . . was
laid in the northwesterly corner of the cellar by . . . Mr. William
Worth, the mason that built the stone and brick work, myself, and
many others.'' November 1755, ``the roof . . . was raised by Robert
Smith, the carpenter that built the timber work.'' November 13,
1756, ``Aaron Burr, President, preached the first sermon and began
the school in Princeton College.''
FitzRandolph was buried in the family
burial ground, which was located where Holder Hall now stands. Workmen
excavating for the foundations of that dormitory in 1909 discovered
thirty-two old, unmarked graves there. At President Wilson's direction
the contents of the graves were preserved in separate boxes and
reinterred under the eastern arch of Holder Hall and a memorial
tablet placed in the arch. President Wilson wrote the English and
Dean West the Latin for the inscription:
``NEAR THIS SPOT
LIE THE REMAINS OF
NATHANIEL FITZRANDOLPH
THE GENEROUS GIVER OF THE LAND
UPON WHICH THE ORIGINAL
BUILDINGS
OF THIS UNIVERSITY
WERE ERECTED"
In Agro Jacet Nostro Immo Suo
[In our ground he sleeps, nay, rather, in his own.]
According to long University tradition,
these gates were closed except on a few very special ceremonial
such as the processional which marked the 200th Anniversary of the
founding of the college.
At other times, they were opened only
at Reunions, for the Twenty-Fifth Reunion Class, which would return
to the campus through the gates, and take their place at the head
of the P-rade.
At the request of the Class of 1970,
these gates were opened permanently in May of that year, as a "symbol
of the University's openness to the local and worldwide community."
Following the 223rd Commencement exercises on June 9, Class members
marched out of the gates, pausing to sing "Old Nassau." On the east
pillar of the gateway (campus side), the class inscribed a motto,
"Together For Community" along with a design that incorporates their
class numerals and a peace sign.
The gates were to be fixed open by
mans of rings set in concrete footings, and in one of these footings,
was to be a small zinc box containing the names of the members of
the Class of 1970 [N.B. There is no record of this actually occurring.]
In the years since 1970, for reasons
that have hitherto escaped understanding, an undergraduate "myth"
has evolved that suggests that any undergraduate who uses this portal
to exit from campus prior to commencement will jeopardize his/her
chances of graduating on time. This legend is given only modest
credence by students, helped along by the annual mention in the
Daily Princetonian Freshman Issue and countless Orange Key
Tour Guides. Suffice it to say that this legend did not exist prior
to 1970, but as some undergraduates will say, "But I'd rather not
tempt fate."
This is adapted
from
Alexander Leitch, A Princeton
Companion, copyright Princeton University Press (1978).
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