The second group of the University of Virginia’s graduates – 4,700 students from 11 schools –walked the Lawn and received their diplomas Sunday. That ceremony came 24 hours after almost 3,200 graduates from the College and Graduate School of Arts & Sciences took their degrees, and capped the University’s 194th Final Exercises.
On Sunday, the University awarded 1,737 baccalaureate degrees, 2,524 graduate degrees and 447 law and medical degrees. The crowd, gathered in front of Old Cabell Hall and stretching north along the Lawn nearly to the Rotunda, amounted to an estimated 20,000 people, including the graduates.
One of those was Nancy Griffith-Cochran, who said she had always wanted to go to UVA. An educator and assistant principal in Loudoun County, she enrolled in the UVA School of Education and Human Development’s education administration doctoral program. Most of her classes were held in Northern Virginia, plus two on-Grounds residencies.
She said she was eager to come back to Grounds. “I was not going to miss the Lawn or the actual, full commencement,” Griffith-Cochran said. Especially not since her daughters had urged her to get her degree in style, carrying a bevy of balloons like so many other graduates.
Griffith-Cochran had studied history as an undergraduate at the College of William & Mary – where UVA’s founder, Thomas Jefferson, had himself gone to college. Coming to UVA, then, felt like a natural next educational step.
“There’s a big connection between the two schools and the quest for knowledge,” Griffith-Cochran said.
The Class of 2023’s experiences at UVA included canceled in-person classes due to COVID, a limited return to Grounds as the pandemic started to ease, and the tragic shooting deaths of three students in November.
In both Saturday’s and Sunday’s ceremonies, speakers acknowledged the losses of Devin Chandler, D’Sean Perry and Lavel Davis Jr., the three football student-athletes shot to death on Grounds by a fellow student as they returned from a field trip. Perry’s mother, Happy Perry, walked the Lawn Saturday in his place, joining the Arts & Sciences graduates.