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Special Collections & Archives: College Archives

College Archives

The College Archives represent a record of campus life throughout the years. The Archives include four sub-collections: the Wang Luyan Papers, the Albert Upton Papers, the Paul S. Smith Papers, and the Phil O'Brien Papers.

Search the collection using the library CATALOG or our Finding Aids. Revisit the history of Whittier College's websites at the Internet Archive Wayback Machine.

Whittier College Students

Quaker Campus Online

The Quaker Campus has been in continuous publication since 1914. The Library has digitized many issues of the Quaker Campus which are now fully searchable in our digital collections.  

Property and literary rights reside with the Wardman Library at Whittier College. For permission to reproduce, publish, or to view original issues please contact the library.

Whittier College Quaker Campus September 1914 to May 1964 

Whittier College Quaker Campus September 1964 to May 2014

Whittier College Quaker Campus September 2014 to Present
 

The Legendary Rock

Catch That Poet Spirit! The Legendary Rock and Freshman Year Rituals

This exhibit from the Whittier College Archives celebrates some past rituals from a unique chapter in the College's history.

Early one morning in June 1912, the Rock was brought to campus by three members of the class of 1912: Frank Crites, Nofle Renneker, and Milton White. With the help of Austin Marshburn ('10), they lugged the tow-ton granite boulder eighteen miles to Whittier via horse-drawn cart. When the Rock was placed on campus it was promptly buried by the Junior class in retaliation. Photographs in this exhibit come from the scrapbook of Gertrude Cox ('12) and depict the Junior-Senior trip to the San Gabriel Mountains the year before they brought the Rock to campus. These never-before-seen photographs likely capture the first time the Class of 1912 encountered the Rock.

Until the 1970s the link between the freshman class and the Rock was "set in stone." During Orientation Week, freshmen followed a strict code of conduct outlined in the Student Handbook. These rules dictated where freshmen could go, what they could do, and what they could wear. Freshmen wore beanies labeled "Frosh", unfashionable jeans, and placards that listed the rules to show their "lower class status." Known as "greenies", freshmen could be commanded by upperclassmen to drop everything at any time and sing the alma mater while touching the button on top of their hats. This friendly hazing culminated in the Frosh-Soph Competitions: the winning class's year was painted on the Rock for an entire semester.

Whittier College is rich with traditions including painting the Rock that has made student life on campus exciting to this day.

Whittier College Authors

The Whittier College Authors is a collection of Faculty publications. 

Search the Library CATALOG