Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH)

 - Class of 1927

Page 26 of 322

 

Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 26 of 322
Page 26 of 322



Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 25
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Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 27
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Page 26 text:

Swasei s generous and far-seeing of the donors to the university. The Swasey Gifts Observatory, given in 1909, a building of surpassing beauty which con- tains astronomical instruments of highest precision, and the Swasey Chapel, which was dedicated in the spring of 1924, one of the most beautiful college religious edifices in the country, are his gifts. ft:- Dcnison aftei 1900, before the Greater Vci [22]

Page 25 text:

i f anrf Center, respectively — C ai,t zw ifn a proud father received a lovi new-born son, a custon of ' 69 and f cup from . notv fallc t , , , , In 1894 Barney Added Buildings Science Hall and Doane Academy- were added. The former burned in 1906, and was later replaced by a fireproof build- ing. Cleveland Hall was built in 1904, a gift of certain Cleveland benefactors. Beaver Beaver Field was provided in 1902 by Mr. F. P. Beaver, a member Field of the board of trustees. It was one of the first to be acquired by an Ohio college. During recent years the campus has been vast- ly extended so that it now includes than hun- dred and fifty acres. Col- lege buildings now cover the entire hill with its seven hilltops, and the Campus Extension more three athletic The about a about a ■ .. m after the construction of Marsh Hall, hy the American Commoiis Chib. Deeds stadium field and layout. property extends mile north of Broadway, Granville, and the main hilltop is itself a crescent mile in length. Much of this land has been secured through gifts of Col. Edward A. Deeds, of Dayton. The same donor made possible the completion o f Deeds Stadium and training quarters which constitute one of the most beautiful and com- plete athletic plants in the state. The stadium was turned over to the university in the fall of 1922, and an additional baseball diamond is in a state of development at present. Dr. Ambrose Swasey, of ' ' ' a7.«r.A; ' ' .f o .?. ' ' X ' ? ' ' ' ' ' Cleveland, has been one of the [21]



Page 27 text:

Greater Denison Unchanging century has left Denison unchanged in her motives. The religious Motives and scholastic purposes of those pioneers who conceived the Gran- ville Literary and Theological Institution are uppermost today in the minds of those who see in the future the Greater Denison. Materially, Denison has changed. From the frame structure which was Changs educational plant of the first students, she has advanced to the well equipped Denison of today. From the first president ' s fifty-five thousands of dollars in endowment she is today powerfully endowed with nearly five millions. Educationally, Denison has never lost sight of the purposes of her founders, to furnish an ... . education which shall not be inferior to what can be obtained in any institution, of whatever name, in the western country. Now Greater Denison presents itself as the slogan for Denison ' s of Greater material step. The Swasey Chapel, Beaver and Sawyer Halls, and Denison the two new houses built by fraternities on Sunset Hill are definite steps toward the realization of Greater Denison, a name which pro- vides for the uniform architectural development on the hill for the entire university. A plan of high distinction has been evolved by the architect, the late Distinction Arnold W. Brunner, of New York, and Frederick Law Olmstead, the landscape architect, who has worked with him on the problem. It is planned with complete administrative, educational, and recreational buildings to accommodate five hundred women and five hundred men, with due provision for future enlargement. Brunner ' s plans for architectural development will make Denison more than a distinctive small college. . , . , The architectural style in which the entire college is carried out Architectural , , i , . . . . i • n ■ Wisdom represents an admirable choice, because it is Georgian Loloniai in manner, deriving from the native architecture of the New England from which the settlers of Granville transplanted themselves, and expressing, at the same time, the pervasive characteristics of the brick Georgian architecture of Maryland and Virginia. It is an admirable choice, moreover, because it is a style which must remain of permanent significance and suitability in this country, regardless of what other styles may come or go across the stage of popularity. Rome, on its Seven Hilltops, was not built in a day, but perished in a day. Vision t hands of one not accustomed to appreciate properly the environment of the magnificent city. Denison, on its Seven Hills, must not and cannot be built in a day. We, of the Denison of Today, must not expect to see Greater Denison Tomorrow. The growth of Denison must be effected so that the ultimate result will coordinate with her ideals — as lasting and as staunch. We of the Denison of Today must have a Vision, realizing the truth that the Greater Denison is comparatively close at hand. We must truly have the Vision of those founders, who, in the face of hard- ship, brought Denison from her meagre beginnings to the fair college on the hill. [23]

Suggestions in the Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH) collection:

Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH) online collection, 1925 Edition, Page 1

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Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH) online collection, 1926 Edition, Page 1

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Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

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Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

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Denison University - Adytum Yearbook (Granville, OH) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930


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