Close-up of Bryant Archway with sunlight shining through.
History lives in objects, and Bryant University holds some remarkable pieces of it.

Step inside the archives: A peek into a handful of Bryant's timeless artifacts

Dec 12, 2025, by Emma Bartlett

From a fragment of the Berlin Wall to a telegram from John F. Kennedy to Bryant University, take a peek at some of the timeless artifacts that make up the university's history:

Golden bulldog statue.

1. Golden Bulldog: Seniors gifted a golden bulldog to the university in 1999. The life-size representation of Tupper, Bryant’s beloved mascot — weighing approximately 125 pounds, base included — is currently housed in the Bulldog Room of the Elizabeth and Malcolm Chace Wellness and Athletic Center.

Telegram from John F. Kennedy to Bryant University.

2. JFK telegram: John Fitzgerald Kennedy, the 35th President of the United States, sent a telegram to Bryant College President E. Gardner Jacobs ’21, ’23MBA, ’69H congratulating the institution on its centennial in 1963. The telegram was sent four days before Kennedy's assassination in Dallas, Texas.

Bryant University medallion.

3. Bryant medallion: Bryant's president wears the Bryant University medallion during academic ceremonies. One side of the medallion bears the University seal and the other lists the names of Bryant's presidents. The Latin phrase on the seal, “Cognitio Virtus Successus,” translates to “Knowledge, Character, Success.”

Aerosmith ad.

4. Aerosmith ad: $3 got students a front row ticket to an Aerosmith concert in the Bryant gym on February 22, 1974, as advertised in The Archway. The 2001 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees had just released their debut studio album the previous year and were about to launch their nationwide Get Your Wings Tour following the release of their second album.

Fragment of Berlin Wall.

5. Berlin Wall fragment: Before he was Bryant University’s seventh president, Ronald Machtley served as a U.S. Congressman, and his role on the Armed Services Committee took him to Berlin, Germany, in late 1989. Seeing that others had taken pieces of the recently fallen Berlin Wall as souvenirs, Machtley wanted to secure a piece of history for himself. Two military escorts brought him to a hole in the wall outside of the city proper, where he climbed through to the East Berlin side and, using a sledgehammer, removed a few pieces of the wall. Machtley would go on to donate them to Rhode Island schools — including Bryant. 

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