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 ===== University Photos Project Description Tools ===== ===== University Photos Project Description Tools =====
   *[[http://​credo.library.umass.edu/​view/​collection/​murg110_176|University Photos in Credo]]| Go here to search existing University Photo collection. | **hint**: to find an exact image, you must type the MODS filename without the '​.xml',​ e.g "​murg150-i0003928"​.   *[[http://​credo.library.umass.edu/​view/​collection/​murg110_176|University Photos in Credo]]| Go here to search existing University Photo collection. | **hint**: to find an exact image, you must type the MODS filename without the '​.xml',​ e.g "​murg150-i0003928"​.
 +*[[http://​names.library.umass.edu|SCUA Name Authority Tool]]| Use this tool to search for previously authorized versions of names and add newly authorized names.
  
 ===UMass History=== ===UMass History===
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   *{{:​umassarchives.pdf|UMass Archives finding aid}}   *{{:​umassarchives.pdf|UMass Archives finding aid}}
   *[[http://​scua.library.umass.edu/​youmass/​doku.php|You Mass wiki]]| For historical info on well known figures and buildings at Umass. ​ Still growing.   *[[http://​scua.library.umass.edu/​youmass/​doku.php|You Mass wiki]]| For historical info on well known figures and buildings at Umass. ​ Still growing.
-  *[[http://www.library.umass.edu/spcoll/umarmot/?​page_id=698|Concordance]]| A comprehensive alphabetical index of UMass departments,​ programs, and other units, including acronyms+  *[[http://scua.library.umass.edu/​umarmot/​overview/​university-records/​concordance/​|Concordance]]| A comprehensive alphabetical index of UMass departments,​ programs, and other units, including acronyms
   *[[http://​archive.org/​details/​cu31924085794547| Massachusetts Agricultural College in the War (1921)]]| A full-text searchable book of students who fought during World War I.   *[[http://​archive.org/​details/​cu31924085794547| Massachusetts Agricultural College in the War (1921)]]| A full-text searchable book of students who fought during World War I.
  
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   *Massachusetts State College: **1931-1947** ​   *Massachusetts State College: **1931-1947** ​
   *University of Massachusetts at Amherst: **1947-**   *University of Massachusetts at Amherst: **1947-**
 +
 +===Lost buildings===
 +There is likelihood, however, that building remnants related to the initial periods of
 +campus growth (1863-1916) do remain. As will be discussed later, several early
 +campus buildings burned. Included among these were the Crouch Barn (1872), plant
 +house (1883), South College (1885), Hatch experiment station barn (1891), ridge barn (1894), dairy
 +building (1906), and the new dairy barn (1908) (Rand 1933:​205-211). In many
 +instances, the replacement buildings were built atop or immediately adjacent to the
 +original building footprints. It is likely that archaeological remains of original
 +buildings exist or, at the very least, evidence of the fires remain.
 +
 +===First buildings===
 +The following buildings, listed chronologically,​ were erected in the 10 years of
 +Clark’s administration (Chadbourne 1867; Hitchcock 1894:​173-174,​ 177-178, 181)
 +though three building contracts were let by Chadbourne: ​
 +20
 +• Laboratory Building [Chemistry] (1867; $10,360): reported as 46 x 57 feet and
 +two stories high. The building contained a room for chemical analysis, 2
 +furnace rooms, 4 apparatus rooms, a balance room and a large lecture room
 +which could also be used as a chapel (Chadbourne 1867:9; Clark 1868:6) [no
 +longer extant].
 +• South College Dormitory (1867; $86,280): 100 x 50 feet, 4 stories high. 48
 +student rooms, recitation rooms, a cabinet and library room (Chadbourne
 +1867:9; Clark 1868:6). Designed by George Hathorne, Esq., New York (Clark
 +1869:9) [rebuilt, no longer extant].
 +• Boarding House (1868; $8,180): house up to 50 students (Chadbourne 1867:9;
 +Clark 1868:6) [no longer extant].
 +• Botanic Museum (1868; $5,180): 31 x 45 feet, 2 stories. Contains president’s
 +office, lecture room, and exhibit spaces (Clark 1868:6) [no longer extant].
 +• Durfee Plant Houses (1868; $12,000 donated by Nathan Durfee): 5,000 square
 +feet in a cluster of glass buildings (Clark 1868:6-7) designed by F. A. Lord,
 +Syracuse, NY [rebuilt, no longer extant].
 +• North College Dormitory (1868) [no longer extant].
 +• College Barn (1869; $7,000 appropriated in 1868, final cost $10,000): designed
 +to be 100 x 50 feet with 28 foot high posts (Clark 1868:7-8; Clark 1870:1-2) [no
 +longer extant].
 +• College Hall (1869): 60 x 97 feet, 4 stories, designed by George Hathorne,
 +New York (Clark 1870:12) [no longer extant].
 +• Drill Hall (1869, proposed 1868; $6,500) [no longer extant].
 +• Farm Superintendent House (1869; $4,000) [no longer extant].
 +• President’s House (1869). ​
 +
 +===19th century through WWI buildings===
 +  * Massachusetts State Agricultural Experiment Station (1882): 48 ½ acres
 +leased from the College Hitchcock (1894:166, 169).
 +• Chemical Laboratory of the State Experiment Station (1883): based plans
 +completed by E.A. Ellsworth [no longer extant].
 +• North College Dormitory (repaired 1884): $6,000 dollars allotted for these
 +repairs and for work on other college buildings (AR 1885:1). The repairs to
 +North College included removal and replacement most woodwork on building interior; 4th story rooms repainted; new floors where needed; 12
 +new windows (AR 1885:2) [no longer extant].
 +• College Chapel (1886; $31,000): housed the college library on its first floor
 +along with the President’s office. The second floor, capable of holding 600
 +persons, was the scene of Sunday services (Hitchcock 1894:174). Stephen C.
 +Earle, Worcester, was the architect for the building (AR 1885:2)
 +• Feeding stable and wing (1886): added to the Experimental Station barn.
 +Another wing was added to the barn sometime between 1886 and 1894
 +(Hitchcock 1894:178, 181) [no longer extant].
 +• South College Dormitory (re-built 1886): new building brick, 3 stories, and it
 +contained student suites, recitation rooms, and the biology department
 +museum. The Hatch Experiment Station office was in the building tower
 +along with the meteorological observatory (Hitchcock 1894:174).
 +• Creamery (1887): added to the Experimental Station barn (Hitchcock
 +(1894:178, 181) [no longer extant].
 +• Hatch Experiment Station (1887): following the enactment of the Hatch Act.
 +The “act established experiment stations in all the States and Territories of
 +the Union…” Hitchcock (1894:170). In 1894, Hatch and the Massachusetts
 +Experiment Station were consolidated and made a College department.
 +• College pastor’s house (unknown date, before 1894): “across the ravine [from
 +the new barns, stables, and dairy school]” (Hitchcock 1894:178) [no longer
 +extant].
 +• Greenhouse, Hatch Experiment Station (1888): based on plans developed by
 +Professor S.T. Maynard. Hitchcock (1894:187) [no longer extant].
 +• Barn Sheds (1889): the south shed was cut into two parts and the shorter part
 +has been appended to the main barn. Original small engine room, in turn,
 +has been to the end of the moved barn shed (AR 1890:12). The remaining half
 +of the south shed has been moved west and a new basement constructed
 +under it (AR 1890:13) [no longer extant].
 +• Dairy Room (1889 redone): existing dairy re-silled, wood floors replaced by
 +concrete, and new sewer connections added to take waste water away from
 +the facility (AR 1890:12) [no longer extant].
 +• Hatch Experiment Station barn (1889): located behind the Boarding House.
 +The barn burned in 1891 and was rebuilt the same year (Hitchcock 1894:178).
 +• Insectary (1889): entomology department of the Hatch Experiment Station
 +(Hitchcock 1894:188) [no longer extant].
 +• Silos (1889): two silos occupy the space once used for roots and sand storage
 +(AR 1890:14) [no longer extant].
 +• Agricultural and Physiology Laboratory (1890): Hitchcock (1894:181) [no
 +longer extant].
 +• Dairy School with barns, stables (1893, 1894): erected near the center of the
 +college “estate and at the foot of the slope west of the campus…” (Hitchcock
 +1894:177) [no longer extant].
 +• Laboratory building (modified 1894): expanded to three stories. The first
 +floor housed the chapel, the zoology department laboratory, and a section of
 +the chemical department. The second floor hosted the mathematical,​ physical, and chemical departments. Japanese agricultural implements were
 +housed on the third floor; earlier it had been used as a drill hall for the cadet
 +battalion (Hitchcock 1894:177) [no longer extant].
 +• Agricultural Building, later named Stockbridge Hall (1912; $210,000):
 +completed in October 1916 with 3 stories and basement, contains auditorium
 +seating 900 (AR 1915:17, 19; AR 1916:17)
 +• Athletic Field (1914): 7 acres, with five thousand feet of ditch and tile (AR
 +1915:15-16)
 +• Department of Rural Engineering Shops (begun 1914): (AR 1915:19) [no
 +longer extant].
 +• Fraternity, Phi Sigma Kappa House (1914): on Pleasant Street at South
 +College Entrance. MAC coordinated water and heating services (AR
 +1915:17).
 +• French Hall addition (1914): (AR 1914:​18-19).
 +• Infirmary (1914, $15,000): two buildings, one with wings for patients and
 +matron/​nurses and the other for isolation (AR 1915:19) [no longer extant].
 +• Piggery and poultry buildings (1914): poultry buildings was added to an
 +existing building (AR 1914:18) [no longer extant]. ​
  
  
upp_resources.1592327384.txt.gz · Last modified: 2020/06/16 17:09 by 128.119.168.9