The Central College Board of Visitors Has Gathered Again in the Rotunda

Framed oil painting of Joseph Carrington Cabell

Photos by Sanjay Suchak, University Communications

The Central College’s original Board of Visitors, which preceded the University of Virginia’s Board of Visitors by two years, are hanging together again – at least on the walls of the board’s meeting room.

The Central College Board of Visitors – founder Thomas Jefferson, past President James Madison, then-sitting President James Monroe, Gen. John Hartwell Cocke, David Watson and Joseph Carrington Cabell – met for the first time on May 5, 1817.

An oval room with a long table and several oil painting hanging on the wall.

In honor of the University’s bicentennial, portraits of the 1817 Central College board - the predecessor of UVA's Board of Visitors - are now displayed in the BOV’s meeting room.

With Watson and Cabell absent, the board approved the site for the college and the construction of Pavilion VII, the first building in the Academical Village. This is the Board of Visitors that laid the cornerstone for what became the University of Virginia.

In honor of the University’s bicentennial, oil-on-canvas portraits of all six members of the Central College board are now displayed in the board’s meeting room in the UVA Rotunda.

Painting of Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson

Portraits of Jefferson, Cabell and Cocke have previously been on display at the University. The University owns the portraits of Cocke and Cabell and the Jefferson portrait is on loan to the University from the Jefferson Literary and Debating Society.

The University has now borrowed portraits of James Madison, James Monroe and David Watson and added them to the display.

The exhibition is possible through a collaboration with several Virginia institutions.

Painting of James Madison

James Madison

The Chester Harding portrait of Madison, painted while he served as rector of the University, is on loan from the Washington & Lee University Museum. A newly discovered portrait of Monroe, attributed to Bass Otis and presumed to be painted during his presidency, is part of the permanent collection of the James Monroe Museum and Memorial Library in Fredericksburg. The Elisabeth Aiken Nolting Charitable Foundation in Louisa, which operates from David Watson’s former farm, has loaned a likeness of the legislator taken from an early Charles Saint-Mémin engraving.

Painting of Joseph Carrington Cabell

Joseph Carrington Cabell

Of those on permanent display at the Rotunda, the Thomas Jefferson portrait was painted by Thomas Sully in 1819; the Joseph Carrington Cabell portrait was painted by Louis Mathieu Guillaume in 1856, and the John Hartwell Cocke portrait was painted by William James Hubard in 1836.

“Each of the six portraits is by a different noted artist,” said Meg Kennedy, director and fine arts program manager for the University’s Office of the Architect. “In terms of portraiture in America, all are significant paintings from the early Federal period.”

Painting of David Watson

David Watson

Kennedy said the portraits allow people to remember the original Board of Visitors, a governing model that has survived at the University of Virginia for 200 years.

“James Monroe was the sitting president,” said Brian Hogg, senior preservation planner in the University’s Office of the Architect. “Watson did not last long, but Madison and Cocke were rectors and helped carry out Jefferson’s vision after he died in 1826.”

Painting of John Hartwell Cocke

John Hartwell Cocke

The Central College board was dissolved in 1819 and subsumed into the University of Virginia Board of Visitors, which was appointed by then-Gov. James Preston, who added three members.

“The Board of Visitors was appointed by the governor to oversee the expenditures for constructing the University, the process of construction, the design of the curriculum, the fees for attendance and the policies to govern the faculty and students,” said Pulitzer-Prize winning UVA historian Alan Taylor, who is writing a book about the founding of the University.

Painting of James Monroe

James Monroe

“They included preeminent statesmen primarily from this section of the Piedmont: Jefferson, Madison, J.H. Cocke, J.C. Cabell. To represent the more western reaches, the board included Chapman Johnson of Staunton and James Breckenridge from southwestern Virginia, and Robert B. Taylor to represent Tidewater.

“Distance often kept Breckenridge and Taylor from attending the meetings, which were held at Monticello until the University buildings were completed.”

In early December, the current Board of Visitors will meet, marking the first time the original Board of Visitors and its modern contemporaries will be together.

Media Contact

Matt Kelly

Office of University Communications