Carry
Me Back
- October 25, 2002
Up
Close and Personal:
Campus Tour
By
George
P. Edmonston Jr.
Editor's
note: If you're planning on returning to OSU
next weekend (Nov.1-3) for Homecoming, why not build
a little time into your schedule for a self-guided
tour of the campus, long considered one of the Northwest's
most beautiful and historic university campuses.
The following feature outlines the history of more
than two dozen of OSU's best-known buildings and
can be used to make any trip to OSU a trip not soon
forgotten. Our thanks to University Archivist Larry
Landis for his research and the writing of this
special feature.
DOWNTOWN
CAMPUS LOCATION (1868-1889)...In 1868, a small
and struggling Corvallis College was designated
as Oregon's land-grant institution thanks to the
efforts of one of its faculty members. The college
was originally located in downtown Corvallis on
the block where City Hall and the Corvallis Moose
Lodge are currently located. The first college building
was a structure built in 1858 and added onto in
1876. In 1871, the college purchased 34.85 acres
west of downtown for the college farm, as specified
by the Morrill Act, the federal act passed by President
Abraham Lincoln in 1862 that provided for a land-grant
institution in each state. The $4,500 needed for
the purchase was raised by 100 local citizens. These
lands included the lower campus area and the future
site of Benton Hall.
BENTON
HALL (1889)...In
1885, The State Agricultural College Association
of Citizens of Benton County incorporated itself
for the purpose of acquiring the funds required
to provide for a new college building on "College
Hill," part of the college farm site. The cornerstone
for the new building was laid in 1887, and the completed
building was accepted in 1888. The college moved
from its downtown location into the new building
in 1889.
First
called the College Building or the Administration
Building, it has been known as Benton Hall since
1947. Unfortunately, the designer is unknown. The
building was constructed at a cost of $25,000, paid
for by the citizens of Benton County. It is a frame
building with a brick exterior, and the brick was
cemented over in 1899. The original entrance featured
a large stairway up to the second floor but this
was removed in 1899. A clock was not installed until
1988. Prior to that time, clock faces were painted
on the tower. According to some accounts, lights
were once placed on the tower to keep couples off
the front lawn area at night.
Benton
Hall has served OSU in many capacities. When first
built, it contained all the college's classroom
and laboratory space. It housed the library until
1918, the President's Office until 1923, and many
administrative offices through the 1940s. Currently,
it is the home of OSU's Music Department, which
has occupied Benton Hall since the mid-1920s.
WOMEN'S
CENTER (1892)...The
Station Building, known today as the Women's Center,
was constructed in 1892 for the Agricultural Experiment
Station and contained a chemistry lab in the basement.
The structure combines Queen Anne and Gothic Revival
influences and, apart from an addition constructed
in 1920, looks much the same as it did more than
100 years ago. It has also housed paleontology labs,
the bookstore and the student health center.
APPERSON
HALL (1899-1900)...Originally
called Mechanical Hall, this building was constructed
after the first Mechanical Hall (built in 1889) burned
in 1898. Lost in that fire were the college's athletic
equipment, dressing rooms and shower facilities. The
new Mechanical Hall, dedicated in 1900, was designed
by Portland architect Edgar H. Lazarus. Its facade
is Oregon gray granite and sandstone, done by French
stone workers. The third floor was added in 1920,
the same year the building was named for John T. Apperson,
an Oregon Agricultural College regent from 1888 until
his death in 1917. Apperson Hall has been used by
the College of Engineering its entire life. It also
housed the printing department for many years. Today,
the building is used by the civil, construction and
environmental engineering departments.
EARLY CAMPUS PLANNING (1909)...OSU's first
campus planning efforts began soon after William Jasper
Kerr assumed the college's presidency in 1907. In
1909, OAC contracted with John C. Olmsted (son of
New York City's Central Park designer Frederick Law
Olmsted) to create a comprehensive, long-range campus
plan. Olmsted presented his ideas to President Kerr
in October 1909 after visiting the campus in June.
Among his recommendations were: planting of trees
and development of buildings of a simple classical
design (most new buildings for the next 30 years were
red brick with white terra cotta trim).
EDUCATION
HALL (1902)...Education Hall was originally
built as Agriculture Hall and was designed by Charles
H. Burggraf of Albany, who also designed Waldo Hall
(on campus) and several other public buildings throughout
the state. The Oregon gray granite on the lower
facade was quarried in the Cascades. By 1909 the
building was known as Science Hall. In the early
1920s, Linus Pauling (a 1922 OAC graduate and two-time
Nobel Prize winner) took classes and labs and also
taught classes in the building. It was damaged by
fire in 1927 and remodeled in 1940 as Education
Hall, which the School of Education has occupied
since that time. The wire mesh was put up in 1996
when workers discovered that the stone facade was
not properly attached to the building's frame.
VALLEY
GYMNASTICS CENTER (1898)...The evolution of
this architecturally unique building has come full
circle. Built in 1898 as the college gymnasium and
armory, it was the first of two buildings designed
by Portland architect Edgar M. Lazarus (Apperson
Hall is the other). It served as the college armory
until 1910; the men's and women's gym from 1899
to 1914; the women's gym from 1914 to 1926; the
rehearsal hall for the cadet band and symphonic
orchestra; and was used for commencement from 1899
to 1916. It later housed the Horner Museum (1936-50)
and the college theater (Mitchell Playhouse, 1951-1990).
After being condemned in 1990, the building was
restored in 1992 as the training facility for OSU's
nationally ranked women's gymnastics team with a
donation from OSU alumni Wayne and Gladys Valley.
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Photo
courtesy the OSU Archives.
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JOHN
V. BENNES...Bennes was a prolific Portland architect
who designed more than 30 buildings on the Oregon
State campus from 1907 to 1940. He also planned
additions and renovations to several buildings.
Bennes, an admirer of Frank Lloyd Wright, was an
exponent of "Prairie School" design for
residences in Portland, but his styles ran the gamut.
Bennes' unity of design at OAC was characterized
by many as "exceptional." The first building
on campus representing his work was a dairy barn
(the first of six he designed for the college),
and he also designed buildings for at least one
branch experiment station and other state higher
education campuses. Other Corvallis buildings credited
to Bennes include the Presbyterian church, the Masonic
Building, the Bexell House on 30th St. and possibly
the Heart of the Valley Center.
McALEXANDER
FIELDHOUSE (1909-1910)...Designed by John
Bennes, the building was constructed in 1909-1910
as the Armory, the back portion of the structure serving
as the college's heating plant. Today, it houses offices
for Army and Air Force ROTC. The massive main interior
area is used by Recreational Sports. The old heating
plant area is now the rifle range. It is named for
Ulysses Grant McAlexander, commandant of OAC cadets
from 1907 to 1911 and 1915 to 1916. A new heating
plant was built in 1923 (another Bennes creation)
and was expanded several times between the 1940s and
the 1970s. The original smokestack from 1923 was removed
in 1994.
WALDO
HALL (1907)...Designed by Charles H. Burggraff
(who also designed Education Hall), Waldo Hall was
completed in 1907 as a women's dormitory. It originally
contained 115 rooms and could accommodate up to
300 women. When it opened, the cost of room and
board was $3.50 per week. The building also included
domestic science labs and classrooms, and faculty
women were allowed to live in Waldo until 1912.
It was named in honor of Dr. Clara Humason Waldo,
an OAC regent from 1905 to 1919. Waldo Hall was
used as a dorm until 1965. Today, it houses the
anthropology department, the OSU Press and the public
health department.
GOSS
STADIUM AT COLEMAN FIELD AND SITE OF BELL FIELD
(1907)...OSU has played baseball on the same
site since 1907, the year the university began playing
organized collegiate baseball. It is the oldest
college/university baseball diamond in the Pac-10
and one of the oldest in the United States. It was
renamed Goss Stadium at Coleman Field in 1998 when
a new grandstand and press box were constructed
with funds donated by alumni John and Eline Goss
of Portland. Ralph Coleman served as OSU head baseball
coach for 35 seasons, from 1923 to 1966, and is
the only baseball coach in Oregon State history
to take the Beavers to the College World Series
(1952).
Immediately
to the west of Coleman Field...one of Oregon State's
most important football stadiums was located here,
on the current site of the Dixon Recreation Center,
from 1913 until 1953, when Parker Stadium (now Reser
Stadium) opened. The stadium was named Bell Field,
had a seating capacity of about 22,000 (as stated
in the 1951 OSC Football Media Guide), and in 1921
was named in honor of J.R.N. Bell, a Presbyterian
minister, former regent and the leading Beaver fan
of his generation, who oftentimes referred to himself
publicly as the school's "mascot."
LANGTON
HALL (1915)...Another Bennes-designed building,
Langton was built in 1915 as the Men's Gymnasium.
In front of the building is The Runner, a bronze
sculpture (1920) that was one of the first pieces
of artwork used to decorate the campus. The building
was used for men's basketball games and commencement
until Gill Coliseum opened in 1950. Today, it houses
the intramural sports offices and the department
of exercise and sport science, is used for physical
education classes and is the facility in which members
of the OSU wrestling team train. In the early 1970s,
the building was named for Clair V. Langton, head
of health and physical education from 1928 to 1964.
MEMORIAL
UNION (1927-28)...Known to generations of Oregon
Staters as simply the "MU," OSU's Memorial
Union building was built in 1927-28 as a monument
to those who have given their lives in defense of
the nation, as well as a center for student life on
campus. Built entirely with private donations and
gifts (at a cost of around $750,000), Oregon State
students had assessed themselves a fee of $3 a term,
beginning in January 1922, to fund the construction.
One of the few buildings of the era not attributed
to John Bennes, it was designed by a 1907 OAC graduate,
Lee Thomas, and is considered one of the finest examples
of neoclassic architecture in Oregon. The building
was dedicated on June 1, 1929. The east and west wings
(bookstore and commons) are later additions, having
been added in 1960 and extensively renovated in the
1990s. The MU was owned by the Memorial Union Corporation
until 1965, when it transferred the facility to the
State Board of Higher Education.
MORELAND
HALL (1917)...This John Bennes-designed building
was opened in 1917 as the Forestry Building and
was used by the College of Forestry until Peavy
Hall was completed in the 1970s. OSU's English Department
has occupied the building since then. In 1973, it
was named for W.W. Moreland, a Corvallis College
faculty member in the 19th century and clerk of
the State Legislature. Moreland is credited with
urging the legislature to accept the conditions
of the Morrill Act, which led to the designation
of Corvallis College as the state's land-grant institution.
Remnants of Forestry's original arboretum are located
behind the building.
A.D. TAYLOR'S CAMPUS PLAN (1926)...In January
1926, A.D. Taylor, a landscape architect from Cleveland,
Ohio, presented to the university community a revision
of the 1909 Olmsted campus plan. His recommendations
for the 100-acre central campus included:
*east
or lower campus to be developed as a park area.
*development
of quads--administration, agriculture/academic,
engineering, separate men's and women's recreation,
etc.
*moving
barns beyond 35th St.
*development
of 30th St. as a boulevard and the western edge
of central campus.
*landscape
plantings to emphasize building entrances or screen
portions and create or enhance vistas; use of group
plantings and specimen and flowering trees; and
establishment of an arboretum.
WEATHERFORD
HALL (1928)...John Bennes designed this beautiful
building, which was built in 1928 (in just six months)
as the Men's Dormitory. It was actually a complex
of five halls linked together and could accommodate
up to 344 men. Originally just the center tower
portion was named Weatherford Hall (for James K.
Weatherford, an alumnus, attorney, and longtime
OAC regent from 1885 to 1927) but in 1957, the entire
building became known by this name. Taylor's campus
plan called for the construction of three additional
complexes at each corner of the quad in which Weatherford
is located, but tight funding for higher education
during the Depression nixed the idea. A dining hall
was added in 1957. Today, this campus landmark is
empty and awaits a major fund-raising campaign for
restoration.
FAIRBANKS
(1892)...Built in 1892 as a dormitory for men,
it was originally known as Cauthorn Hall and named
for state Senator and OAC Regent Thomas Cauthorn.
It was designed by architect W.D. Pugh in an architectural
style that has been characterized as "eclectic."
When first opened, the dorm could accommodate more
than 100 students and included water, steam heat,
electric lights, dining room and kitchen. In the
early 1900s, OAC faculty member and historian John
Horner (for whom Horner museum was named) and his
wife served as dorm "parents." From 1915
to 1931, the building was used as a women's dorm
and, by 1927, was known as Kidder Hall, in memory
of Ida Kidder, OSU's first professional librarian.
WOMEN'S BUILDING (1926)...The Italian Renaissance
building, constructed in 1926 as the women's gymnasium,
was designed by John Bennes and is considered one
of his grandest structures on campus. It was also
the only campus building he designed through an
open competition (there were 14 entries). The brick
used in its construction was fired in Monroe (Ore.).
The building includes a 30' X 70' swimming pool
and a lounge and assembly room containing a large
fireplace. It currently houses the dean's office,
faculty offices and classrooms for the College of
Health and Human Sciences.
MILAM HALL (1914)...One of Bennes' early
buildings, its first unit was constructed in 1914
for the School of Domestic Science, which later
became the School of Home Economics. Additions to
the building were built in 1920 (east wing) and
1952 (west wing). In 1976, it was named for Ava
Milam, the longtime dean of home economics (1917-1950).
The east wing of the building today houses the university's
history department.
STRAND
AGRICULTURAL HALL (1909)...The first unit of
this building, constructed in 1909 and called the
Agronomy Building, was designed by John Bennes and
his partners. The second and third units were built
in 1911 and 1913. In the 1910s and 1920s, greenhouses
were located on the building's south side, where
the MU pay parking lot is today. Most departments
within the College of Agricultural Sciences have
been housed here at one time, many moved as programs
expanded. Today it houses the College of Agricultural
Science's dean's offices, the ethnic studies department
and several other programs. It was named for August
L. Strand in 1984, OSU president from 1942 to 1961.
SOCIAL
SCIENCES HALL (1912)...Another Bennes-designed
building, it was constructed in 1912 as the Dairy
Building. It has been used by the College of Liberal
Arts for several decades. When Pulitzer Prize-winning
novelist Bernard Malamud (who wrote The Natural)
was on the Oregon State faculty, he taught English
classes in this building in the late 1940s and 1950s.
Alpha Hall (for women, built 1889) originally occupied
this site.
BEXELL
HALL (1922)...John Bennes designed the building,
which was constructed in 1922 as the Commerce Building.
It has housed the College of Business (and its predecessors,
such as the School of Commerce) its entire existence.
It also housed the president's offices from 1923
to 1972. In 1966 it was named for John A. Bexell,
founder and head of OAC School of Commerce from
1908 to 1931.
SHEPARD
HALL (1908)...Shepard Hall was constructed in
1908 as the YMCA/YWCA, as well as space for student
activities. It was not an official campus building.
It was designed by a Portland architect named McNaughton
and named for Clayborn L. Shepard, OAC's YMCA general
secretary in 1905-06. Shepard was largely responsible
for raising funds for the facility but died before
it was built. Its basement included a swimming pool,
which was used by female students until the Women's
Building pool was completed in 1926. The building
was also used as a hospital during the flu epidemic
of 1918-19; in January 1919, 26 students and townspeople
occupied rooms on the second floor. The School of
Education rented space in Shepard Hall from the
late 1920s until 1940. In 1940, the college (that
is, Oregon State College or OSC) purchased the building,
which has housed the speech communication department.
BATCHELLER
HALL (1913)...Another of Bennes' early designs,
this building was constructed in 1913 and originally
housed the School of Mines. It was later named for
James H. Batcheller, head of the School of Mines
from 1919 to 1942. Today, the building is used by
the College of Engineering.
KIDDER
HALL (1918)...John Bennes designed this building,
which was constructed in 1918, as the college library.
He also designed the library's west wing, built
in 1941. Plans also called for an east wing which
was never built. In 1954, the library was named
the Kerr Library in memory of William Jasper Kerr,
OAC president from 1907 to 1932. After a new library
was built in 1963 (now the Valley Library), the
building was named Kidder Hall for Ida Kidder, OAC
librarian from 1908 to 1920. This was the second
building to bear Kidder's name and was the home
of the University Archives from 1963 to 1972. Today
it houses the College of Science dean's office,
the mathematics and statistics departments, and
part of the Communication Media Center.
Kidder
Hall was the second building to serve as OSU's library.
Previous to this structure, the library had been
located in the Administration Building (Benton Hall).
The 1963 Kerr Library building was enlarged in 1971
and in the late 1980s, planning began for a new
library facility. Today's facility, the Valley Library,
is a $40 million enlargement and renovation of the
1963/1971 structure. It was funded largely by the
Valley Foundation (founded by OSU alumni Wayne and
Gladys Valley) and was dedicated on May 28, 1999.
PHARMACY
BUILDING (1924)...Yet another Bennes design,
this building was constructed in 1924 and has been
used exclusively by the College of Pharmacy since
that time. The second floor included a model drugstore,
which was described in a pharmacy trade magazine
of the time as providing "a laboratory for
instruction in store arrangement, showcase and window
decorating, and practical salesmanship of drugs
and druggists' sundries." An addition to the
building was constructed in 1966.
-- By George
Edmonston Jr. and Larry
Landis. All images used come fromt he 1938
Orange & Black, The '09 Orange and The '11 Orange.
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