Company Profile

Raymond A. Mason School of Business

Company Overview

Over 400 years ago, on the banks of the majestic James River, as the Virginia Company established a foothold in the new world, the seeds were sown for a nation based on free enterprise and a marketplace of ideas and personal liberties.

Almost from the outset of this experiment in exploration, commerce, risk and reward, the College of William & Mary served as a catalyst for the ideas and the people who would, quite literally, change the world. William and Mary has been called Alma Mater of the Nation because the leaders who had such a profound effect on shaping our democracy — Washington, Jefferson, Patrick Henry, John Marshall, James Monroe — either studied here or walked its historic pathways and cobblestones debating the merits of a republic based on “life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.”

At The College of William & Mary, the voices of our nation’s builders still echo through our halls. This place fostered the dreams that would fuel a revolution and give birth to a nation.

Driven by our distinctive ideals of public service, entrepreneurship and innovation we have pressed on and once again take up the challenge of revolution, an economic one, where commerce, integrity, hard work and innovation will be called on to reshape the world once more.

The Mason School of Business embraces the spirit of revolution by educating the next generation of principled leaders who will imagine the great business opportunities of the day and seize them.

The entrepreneurial spirit that is the cornerstone of American business is as alive and as important as ever and lives on at the Mason School of Business.

Company History

The Mason School of Business has deep roots in the history and traditions that has made the College of William and Mary one of the most distinguished liberal arts universities in the nation.

Founded in 1693, the College is the second oldest university in the nation-the first was Harvard-and educated many of the nation's Founding Fathers and leaders spanning five centuries, thus earning the name Alma Mater of the Nation. It ranks consistently among the top 10 public, undergraduate liberal arts colleges in the United States.

Proud traditions of the College include the founding of the national honor society Phi Beta Kappa and the Honor Code that inspires alumni, students and members of the College community to lead ethical and moral lives.

This same commitment to scholarship, service and ethics underscores the mission and curriculum of the Mason School of Business. The School educates the next generation of business leaders by offering a highly personalized, experience-based learning environment that fosters team-building skills, self-reliance, an entrepreneurial spirit and ethical character. This pledge is expressed in the School's educational mission: "To nurture creativity, to mentor high-mindedness, to accelerate ambitions of leadership in our students that they might imagine the great business opportunities of the day and seize them."

In 1919 William & Mary President Julian A.C. Chandler established the Department of Business while expanding the College's sphere of services. The study of business grew in popularity over the 20th Century, with substantial growth after the end of World War II.

The College established the Master of Business Administration (MBA) Program in 1966. In 1968 the Department of Business became the School of Business, and in 1971, the College's Board of Visitors approved the addition of the Bachelor of Business Administration (BBA) undergraduate degree. One in six undergraduate students at the College major or minor in business, making it the most popular major on campus.

In November 2005, the School of Business was named for W&M alumnus, Raymond A. "Chip" Mason, former Chairman, President, and Chief Executive Officer of Legg Mason.

In March 2007, the Mason School broke ground on Alan B. Miller Hall, the new home of the Mason School of Business. Named for W&M alumnus Alan B. Miller who is Chairman, CEO, and President of Universal Health Services, Miller Hall stands as the "western gateway to the campus" opposite the Christopher Wren Building, the oldest academic building in the country.

It opened in Fall of 2009 to the graduate and undergraduate communities of the School of Business and was officially dedicated on October 2, 2009.

Benefits

The College of William & Mary employs approximately 600 Professionals & Professional Faculty. This employee class is entitled to participate in myriad of benefits. Please visit http://www.wm.edu/offices/hr/currentemployees/benefits/12monthprofandfaculty/index.php to view them all.

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