Colonel Ebirt

Colonel Ebirt was the unofficial school mascot for the College of William & Mary from 2001 to 2005.[1] A green and gold frog that donned a tri-corner hat, Colonel Ebirt was originally used as a promotional tool for Colonial Williamsburg. It became involved with the College athletics program when someone from the William & Mary gymnastics program volunteered to wear the costume.[1] "Ebirt" is Tribe spelled backwards ("ebirt" is analogous to the more commonly heard frog call "ribit"), and "Colonel" comes from the school's historical and geographical ties to Williamsburg, Virginia, specifically that of Colonial Williamsburg.[2][3]

Colonel Ebirt
Colonel Ebirt giving a 'thumbs up' prior to a Tribe football game.
UniversityCollege of William & Mary
ConferenceCAA
DescriptionGreen and Gold Frog
Origin of name"Tribe" spelled backwards
First seen2001-2005

The athletic department decided to "retire" Ebirt upon the conclusion of the 2005–06 school year.[4] On April 6, 2010, William and Mary announced that a griffin was to become their official mascot, replacing Ebirt.

See also

  • Griffin – William & Mary's mascot successor to Colonel Ebirt
  • List of U.S. college mascots

References and notes

  1. "Colonel Ebirt is No More". DoG Street Journal. Retrieved 2008-07-24.
  2. Ed Williams (June 22, 2009), "Wanted: William and Mary mascot. Got an idea?", The Virginian-Pilot
  3. "Williamsburg, Virginia", USA Today, 23 April 2007
  4. Since Colonel Ebirt was never an official mascot, the term "retire" is used loosely.


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