Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA)

 - Class of 1988

Page 22 of 216

 

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 22 of 216
Page 22 of 216



Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1988 Edition, Page 21
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Page 22 text:

EMERSON DINING HALL (1908): Named for Alfred Emerson, trustee from 1872 to 1893 and treasurer from 1880 to 1891, and his wife, Martha Vose Emerson, princi- pal from 1842 to 1849. The Dimple was graded at this time because plans called for a reflecting pool (the depression was formed when a stable barn was sold and removed in 1905). Appeared in Good Housekeeping Magazine as one of the most beautiful dining halls in the U.S. The open porch from which diners watched plays performed in the Dimple was roofed over and glassed in ca. 1927. New kitchen equipment was installed in the 1930s. Rooms over the dining hall, originally residences for kitchen help, were used as faculty offices for some years before 1971, when they were converted to student residences (faculty offices were created in the renova- tion of Knapton Hall). In 1950, the Faculty Dining Room was added, the kitchen and bakery enlarged, and base- ment rooms finished for food preparation. “Crum’s Closet” is a former coat closet off the Faculty Dining Room made over into a small meeting room, and offi- cially named for Sarah Crum, the Coordinator of Cam- pus Events from 197] to 1987 at her retirement party. In 1984, an electric carillon was added to Emerson, witha gift from Madeleine Clark Wallace WI934. The keyboard is in the faculty lounge, and the speakers are in the cupola. MADELEINE CLARK WALLACE LIBRARY (1923): Wheaton’s library began in a room in Old Metcalf Hall, was moved to the gymnasium building in 1869, and to a specially designed room in Mary Lyon Hall in 1879. The library continued to grow until it occupied Rooms 7, 9, and 10 in Mary Lyon Hall, and it was finally removed to the Chapel basement in 1918-19, where it remained until the current building opened in 1923. The Library was dedicated at Commence- ment in June 1923, but the books could not be moved to their new home until a few days before the open-| ing of college in September 1923 due to the general disruption caused by the installation of a new steam distributing system. In 1933, the science library was moved from the overcrowded library to a large room in the basement of the Science Hall (Knapton). Grow- ing use and storage of periodical literature contrib- uted to the space problem. The Henry Clay Jackson Wing, added in 1941 (formally opened in Jan. 1942), was made possible by a gift from the Paul Wilde Jackson Fund of Boston. It included a Browsing Room, new books area, periodical room and stacks for bound periodicals. The Laila Raabe collection of early American glass was displayed in specially-built exhibit cases in a hallway outside the Browsing Room (transferred to Watson in 1982). In 1961, when the Periodicals Wing was added, floors were placed across the atrium to create more stack space (seating and stack space were doubled). In 1979 80 another addition to the Library restored the atrium and created a sky-lighted Stair Tower and underground stack area to join the Library to the Science Center. An Archives Reading Room was also created. The Library was named for Mrs. Wallace W1934 in 1984, when she made Wheaton College her residuary legatee on the occasion of her 50th reunion (ca. $1.2 million).

Page 21 text:

CHAPIN HALL (1900): The first brick building built at Wheaton, this dormitory was named for Samuel Austin Chapin, brother of Mrs. Wheaton, and a trustee from 1889-1890. The interior was rebuilt in 1934 (repiped, re- wired, replastered, repainted, refloored). In 1986 it ceased to be a dormitory, and became offices for the Center for Work and Learning. HEBE (1884): Mrs. Eliza Baylies Wheaton gave the original lead statue fountain of Hebe to the Seminary for its fiftieth anniversary in 1884. The fountain was placed outside Mary Lyon Hall, be- tween the west wing and Old Metcalf. It was moved in the fall of 1932 to a location in Hebe Court (thus the name of the Parlors and the court- yard). It was repeatedly damaged in attempts to steal the statue, and at one time had an electrical alarm installed inside it. The statue was removed in the 1970s, and restored in 1980 by Fritz Cleary, husband of Hope Kielland Cleary WI944, and fa- ther of Catherine Cleary WI982, who made casts of the original, and reconstructed the statue. The current statue is the bronze casting made by Mr. Cleary. KNAPTON HALL SCIENCE HALL (I9Il): Originally de- signed as a Science and assembly hall. Science Hall was constructed on the site of an apple orchard where stu- dents spent Sundays when not allowed to leave campus. The cornerstone-laying ceremony held for Science Hall was apparently the first such ceremony held at Wheaton. The basement held Botany and Biology labs. The first floor served as a chapel until Cole Chapel was built in 1917, when it was divided into recitation rooms, having been de- signed and built with this in view. The second floor held Physics and Chemistry laboratories and a lecture room with a sloping floor. The third floor was used by the Art Department. When smoking was first allowed at Wheaton in 1932, a temporary smoking room was fitted up in the Science Hall, until a smoking room was established in Hebe Parlors. In 1933 part of the basement was converted into a science library. A wing was added in 194] (opened in 1942) to provide more and modern laboratory space. In 1971, Knapton was rebuilt to create a center for the social sciences. Science Hall was renamed Knapton Hall in honor of Dr. Ernest John Knapton, a member of the history department from 1931 to 1969.



Page 23 text:

GYMNASIUM (1844): Originally located between the north wing of Mary Lyon Hall and Old Metcalf Hall, this is believed to be the first freestanding gymnasium built at any women’s college in the U.S. In 1869 it was remodeled, and the Seminary Library was moved into this building. When addi- tions were made to Mary Lyon Hall in 1878, Mrs. Wheaton donated the building to the Trinitarian Congregational Church for its vestry. At first, the vestry was attached to the rear of the Church, facing south. The former gymnasium was moved to its present position at the southern end of the Church’s current horseshoe shape in 1963. at. . we ten Se, 3 Pr Se os ge BON Se Et PIR ck 2 BOWLING ALLEY (1884-85): This building had two alleys and stained- glass windows. It was first mentioned in the catalogue of I90I-O2, and last mentioned in 1907-08. It was later razed. Cole Memorial Chapel (1917): The chapel was named in 1926 for the Rev. Samuel Valentine Cole, Trustee from 1893 to 1925, and College President from 1897 until his death in 1925. The original seating capacity of ca. 900 was expanded in 1934. 19

Suggestions in the Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) collection:

Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1983 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1984 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1985 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1986 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1987 Edition, Page 1

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Wheaton College - Nike Yearbook (Norton, MA) online collection, 1989 Edition, Page 1

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