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FAMU Yearbook Collection
Meek-Eaton Archival Collection AR_0007-_006-_001-_01 · 1929 - 2004
Parte de History of FAMU

The Florida A&M University (FAMU) Yearbook Collection documents the history, traditions, achievements, and student experiences of one of the nation's premier Historically Black Colleges and Universities. The earliest known yearbook represented in this collection is The FAMCEAN, published in 1929 by the Senior Class of the Florida Agricultural and Mechanical College in Tallahassee, Florida. The publication served as a record of student life, academic accomplishments, campus organizations, athletics, and graduating classes during a period of significant growth in Black higher education.

In 1946, the yearbook was published under the title The Flamingo before transitioning to The Rattler in 1950, a name that reflected the university's mascot and institutional identity. Over the following decades, The Rattler became one of FAMU's most enduring student publications, preserving photographs, senior portraits, fraternity and sorority activities, athletic programs, musical organizations, academic achievements, campus events, and significant moments in university history. The yearbooks provide a unique visual and documentary record of changing student experiences, cultural trends, and institutional development throughout the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries.

The yearbooks were produced through a collaborative effort involving student editors, yearbook staff members, journalism students, graphic artists, photographers, and faculty advisors. Because yearbook production was primarily student-led, editorial teams changed annually, resulting in each volume reflecting the perspectives, priorities, and experiences of a different generation of FAMU students. Faculty members within the School of Journalism and Graphic Communication provided guidance and oversight, while commercial publishing companies, including Taylor Publishing Company, assisted with printing and production. Today, the yearbooks serve as valuable primary sources for research on African American higher education, student life, campus culture, and the history of Florida A&M University.

Rattler 1955
Meek-Eaton Archival Collection AR_0007-_006-_001-_01-Box 02-Folder 02 · 1955
Parte de History of FAMU
FAMU Yearbook
Meek-Eaton Archival Collection AR_0007-_006-_001-_01-Box 04 · 1962 - 1965
Parte de History of FAMU

Box 4 contains issues of The Rattler, the official Florida A&M University yearbook, documenting student life, academic programs, athletics, student organizations, faculty, and significant campus events. Included are the 1962, 1963, 1964, and 1965 editions of The Rattler. These yearbooks provide a visual and historical record of Florida A&M University during the early years of the Civil Rights Movement, highlighting student achievements, campus traditions, academic life, and the evolving social and cultural climate of the university. Materials are arranged chronologically by publication year. Dates range from 1962–1965.

1966 Rattler
Meek-Eaton Archival Collection AR_0007-_006-_001-_01-Box 05-Folder 01 · 1966
Parte de History of FAMU
1967 Rattler
Meek-Eaton Archival Collection AR_0007-_006-_001-_01-Box 05-Folder 02 · 1967
Parte de History of FAMU
Rattler 1969
Meek-Eaton Archival Collection AR_0007-_006-_001-_01-Box 05-Folder 04 · 1969
Parte de History of FAMU
70 Rattler
Meek-Eaton Archival Collection AR_0007-_006-_001-_01-Box 06-Folder 01 · 1970
Parte de History of FAMU
The Rattler 1975
Meek-Eaton Archival Collection AR_0007-_006-_001-_01-Box 06-Folder 05 · 1975
Parte de History of FAMU