Statue of William the Silent

William the Silent
Bronze statue of a man in Elizabethean-period dress on a stone base
Statue of William the Silent on Rutgers University's Voorhees Mall
ArtistToon Dupuis (1877–1937) after Lodewyk Royer (1793–1868); Fonderie Nationale des Bronzes
Year1920 (1920)
TypeBronze sculpture, granite base
LocationNew Brunswick, New Jersey, United States
Coordinates40°30.087′N 74°26.877′W / 40.501450°N 74.447950°W / 40.501450; -74.447950
OwnerRutgers, The State University of New Jersey
AccessionDedicated June 9, 1928

A bronze statue of William the Silent (also known as Willie the Silent and Still Bill) was installed in 1928 on the Voorhees Mall section of Rutgers University's College Avenue Campus in New Brunswick, New Jersey. It is along Seminary Place, a street at the western end of the Voorhees Mall, and near several academic buildings, including the university's Graduate School of Education, Van Dyke Hall, and Milledoler Hall.

The statue is of William I, Prince of Orange (1533–1584), an early leader of the Dutch revolt against Habsburg Spain which led to the Netherlands' independence in 1648. It was donated by Dr. Fenton B. Turck to commemorate the university's Dutch heritage. Turck, with the assistance of railroad executive and Rutgers alumnus Leonor F. Loree, arranged the anonymous donation through the Holland Society of New York.

The statue has continued to be part of student life as the Voorhees Mall had been the site of student and community events, including graduation ceremonies, pep rallies, festivals, and protests. It has occasionally been a target of vandalism in the historical rivalry between students of Rutgers and Princeton University. It was restored in 2006 in an effort funded by alumni donations.