The St. John's College Digital Archives provides online access to special collections at the Greenfield Library (Annapolis) and Meem Library (Santa Fe).
History of St. John’s College
St. John’s College is the third oldest college in the United States (reportedly behind Harvard, established in 1636, and College of William and Mary in 1693). Here is a timeline of St. John’s history and some fun facts. Learn more about our college traditions.
1696
The King William’s School, the Maryland colony’s “free” school, is founded.
1784
The state of Maryland charters St. John’s College, merging it with King William’s School; four of the college founders signed the Declaration of Independence in 1776.
1789
The former governor’s mansion, McDowell Hall, is completed and serves as the foundation for the college; it is now one of the oldest academic buildings in continuous use in the country. The interior of McDowell Hall was renovated in 2017.
1791
President George Washington, who in 1783 at the nearby Maryland State House resigned his commission as commander-in-chief of the Continental Army, visits St. John’s College, expressing “much satisfaction at the appearance of this rising seminary.”
1792
Since at least 1792, the first year we have a documented curriculum for St. John’s, Johnnies have read the following authors that are still read in the Program today: Euclid, Plato, Livy, Xenophon, Aristotle, and Epictetus.
1814
Francis Scott Key, a St. John’s alumnus, watches the British bombardment of Fort McHenry in Baltimore and pens a poem—“The Star-Spangled Banner”—commemorating the American victory.
1818
By 1818, these still-read Program authors were added to the curriculum: Homer, John Locke, Virgil, Tacitus, Plutarch, Cicero, Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay.
1863
During the Civil War when Camp Parole is built outside the city of Annapolis, the Union’s medical corps takes over St. John’s buildings, which became known as College Green Hospital.
1899
The Black and Orange, the St. John’s College football team, earns a 62-0 victory against what is now the University of Maryland, making the front page of the Washington Post.
1909
A fire engulfs McDowell Hall and nearly burns the historic center of St. John’s College to the ground; in the aftermath of the blaze, alumni successfully advocate to have the building restored as close as possible to the original design.
1937
Stringfellow Barr and Scott Buchanan implement their big idea, the New Program, which the college still follows today.
1950
Alumni Jac Holzman and Paul Rickolt started Elektra Records in Holzman’s dorm room. The label roster includes such legendary bands as Queen, the Doors, the Stooges, MC5, and many more.
1951
St. John’s admits its first class of women in the student body; American folk legend Woody Guthrie performs at the college.
1952
Program author W. E. B. Du Bois lectures in the King William Room on the Annapolis campus. Du Bois is the only Program author to have given a lecture at the college.
1959
President Dwight Eisenhower dedicates the McKeldin Planetarium and two other buildings on the Annapolis campus.
1964
The college’s Santa Fe campus opens, with 81 students in the first freshman class.
1967
St. John’s launches a summer institute for teachers, which will become the St. John’s College Graduate Institute.
1983
The Johnnies battle the Midshipmen of the U.S. Naval Academy in the Annapolis Cup croquet match, which has become a beloved tradition.
1991
Christopher B. Nelson (SF70) is inaugurated as 23rd president of the Annapolis campus.
1994
The Eastern Classics program officially joins the Graduate Institute in Santa Fe.
2005
Six million television viewers tune in to a segment about St. John’s on the Today Show.
2016
Mark Roosevelt is inaugurated as seventh president of the Santa Fe campus.
2017
Panayiotis (Peter) Kanelos is named the 24th president of the Annapolis campus after Christopher B. Nelson retired at the end of the 2016-17 academic year.
2018
On September 12, St. John’s announced a new philanthropy-centered financial model and tuition for undergraduate students was reduced from more than $52,000 to $35,000 beginning with the 2019–20 academic year. St. John’s launched a $300-million capital campaign, Freeing Minds, and was described as “The Most Contrarian College in America” by the New York Times columnist Frank Bruni.
2021
Nora Demleitner is named the 25th president of the Annapolis campus.