Top Physics Schools in Virginia

On TopSchoolsintheUSA.com, you can learn what the top-ranked physics colleges and universities are in Virginia, and compare the best physics colleges, and get the latest ranking of best schools for physics in Virginia. From the following table, please see full list of top 5 graduate schools of physics in Virginia including school information and contact profile.

Top Physics Schools in Virginia

RANKING GRADUATE PHYSICS
1 University of Virginia, Department of Physics
Address: 382 McCormick Road, Charlottesville, VA 22904-4714
Phone: (434) 924-4576
Email: grad-info-request@physics.virginia.edu
Website: http://www.phys.virginia.edu
2 Virginia Tech, Department of Physics
Address: Robeson Hall (0435), Blacksburg, VA 24061-0435
Phone: (540) 231-6544
Email: info@phys.vt.edu
Website: http://www.phys.vt.edu
3 College of William and Mary, Department of Physics
Address: PO Box 8795, Williamsburg, VA 23187-8795
Phone: (757) 221-3500
Email: grad@physics.wm.edu
Website: http://www.wm.edu
4 Old Dominion University, Department of Physics
Address: 4600 Elkhorn Avenue, Norfolk, VA 23529
Phone: (757) 683-3468
Email: mhavey@odu.edu
Website: http://sci.odu.edu
5 Hampton University, Department of Physics
Address: 203 Wigwam Hall, Hampton, VA 23668
Phone: (757) 727-5277
Email: doyle.temple@hamptonu.edu
Website: http://www.hamptonu.edu

Virginia Before Independence

In 1624, the status of the Jamestown colony changed. The charter of the Virginia Company was repealed and Virginia became an English royal colony. Nevertheless, the legislature of the colony, the General Assembly, was preserved.

The colony continued to grow, in the thirties of the 17th century it was administratively divided into districts, some of which have survived to this day.

There were also clashes with the Indians. In 1644, a new, already third Anglo-Pohatan war began. In 1645-46, the colonists built four forts to protect their lands. The leader of the union of Indian tribes was captured and killed. Finally, in October 1646, a peace treaty was signed.

After the defeat in the Civil War, many royalists fled from England to Virginia. After the restoration of the monarchy, in gratitude to the Virginia colony for its loyalty to the crown, the English King Charles II granted Virginia the honorary title – “Old Dominion”. This state nickname is still used today.

Peace with the Indians lasted thirty years. In 1676, dissatisfied with the constant attacks of the Indians and the inactivity of the authorities, the settlers opposed Governor William Berkeley. They were led by a twenty-nine-year-old colonist, one of the organizers of the people’s militia that held back the Indians, Nathaniel Bacon.

The rebels seized power in the colony and held it for several months. They attacked the Indians, including peaceful tribes, so in this conflict the Indians supported the British.

To suppress the rebellion, known as “Bacon’s Rebellion”, the metropolis sent troops. During the fighting, Jamestown was captured by the rebels and burned. Nathaniel Bacon died of dysentery in October 1676, after his death the rebellion was put down. “Bacon’s Rebellion” was the first organized protest against the authorities in the American colonies of England.

While the burned-out Jamestown was being rebuilt, a temporary headquarters for the government of the colony was organized not far from it, in a place called the “Near Plantation”. Situated on a hill, the new community turned out to be much more comfortable to live in than Jamestown, built in the middle of the swamps.

In 1693, the College of William and Mary was founded here, the second (after Harvard) oldest college in the United States.

When in 1698 the government building in Jamestown was again damaged by fire. The government again moved to the Near Plantation. In 1699, the settlement was named Williamsburg and became the new capital of the Virginia Colony.