The Bantam

The bantam mascot
Photo by Shaina Blakesley

The story behind Trinity College’s beloved Bantam, it has been written, goes something like this: The Honorable Joseph Buffington, Trinity Class of 1875, who served as a trustee of the College and as a federal judge, also was known as a skilled public speaker. It was in Pittsburgh in spring 1899, at a meeting of the Princeton Alumni Association of Western Pennsylvania, that Buffington introduced the Trinity mascot of the future. Noting the competitiveness and spirit—in athletics and more—of Trinity students and likening the college landscape to that of a barnyard, Buffington referred to a bantam, an independent and spirited animal. “The Trinity [B]antam ever feels that whatever company is fit for him to be at, he is entirely fit to be there,” he said. Sports media picked up on it and began referencing the Bantam as the College’s mascot. And the rest, as they say, is history.

EDITOR’S NOTE “Trinity Treasure” highlights a person, place, or thing on campus that is just what the name implies: a Trinity treasure. Do you have an idea for what to showcase? Please send your suggestions to [email protected].

In this photo, circa 1875, Joseph Buffington, Trinity Class of 1875 and later creator of the College’s Bantam mascot, lounges on a sofa, while William G. Mather, Class of 1877, relaxes in a rocking chair in suite 28 of Brownell Hall on Trinity’s original campus. Photo courtesy of the Trinity College Archive
In this photo, circa 1875, Joseph Buffington, Trinity Class of 1875 and later creator of the College’s Bantam mascot, lounges on a sofa, while William G. Mather, Class of 1877, relaxes in a rocking chair in suite 28 of Brownell Hall on Trinity’s original campus. Photo courtesy of the Trinity College Archive