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brownell_hall [2023/07/11 17:38] bant06brownell_hall [2024/02/05 19:24] (current) bant07
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 Brownell Hall was the final building added to the Trinity College [[old_campus|original campus]] in 1845 and was named for [[brownell_thomas_church|Thomas Church Brownell]], Trinity's first [[presidents|president]] and the third Episcopal Bishop in Connecticut.  Brownell Hall was the final building added to the Trinity College [[old_campus|original campus]] in 1845 and was named for [[brownell_thomas_church|Thomas Church Brownell]], Trinity's first [[presidents|president]] and the third Episcopal Bishop in Connecticut. 
  
-Though it was not constructed for 20 years, images of Trinity with three buildings appeared as early as 1824, including in a survey of [[hartford|Hartford]] done in 1824 and in a woodcut on the title page of a journal called the //Episcopal Watchman// from 1827. +Though it was not constructed until 20 years after the first college building had been erected, images of Trinity with three buildings appeared as early as 1824, including in a survey of [[hartford|Hartford]] done in 1824 and in a woodcut on the title page of a journal called the //Episcopal Watchman// from 1827. 
  
-Brownell Hall was possibly designed by Solomon Willard; a drawing of a nearly identical building holds his signature in the College archives. Brownell Hall was in exterior a replica of the [[jarvis_hall|"College,"]] and built in the ionic style in brownstone by Messrs. Campbell with woodwork by a Mr. Rowell.+Brownell Hall was likely designed by [[totten_silas|Silas Totten]], and drew inspiration from Willard's original drawings((Tolles, p. 140)) Brownell Hall was in exterior a replica of the [[jarvis_hall|"College,"]] and built in the ionic style in brownstone by Messrs. Campbell with woodwork by a Mr. Rowell.
  
-[{{:screenshot_160_.png?300 |The Brownell Hall cornerstone, mounted in Downes Clock Tower. Photo credit: Amanda Matava}}]+[{{:screenshot_160_.png?200 |The Brownell Hall cornerstone, mounted in Downes Clock Tower. Photo credit: Amanda Matava}}]
  
 //Within the structure were thirty-eight student rooms, a recitation hall, and an apartment to be occupied by a Professor and his family. Although similar in external appearance to Jarvis Hall, the new building's interior was notably different from Jarvis. An arrangement of rooms around "entries" - rather than the long halls of Jarvis - provided better light and also precluded the boisterous log-rolling contests which had caused so much trouble for the faculty committee on student discipline.// ((Weaver, p. 82)) //Within the structure were thirty-eight student rooms, a recitation hall, and an apartment to be occupied by a Professor and his family. Although similar in external appearance to Jarvis Hall, the new building's interior was notably different from Jarvis. An arrangement of rooms around "entries" - rather than the long halls of Jarvis - provided better light and also precluded the boisterous log-rolling contests which had caused so much trouble for the faculty committee on student discipline.// ((Weaver, p. 82))
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 ===== Sources ===== ===== Sources =====
 +
 +Architecture & Academe: College Buildings in New England before 1860 (2011) by Bryant F. Tolles, Jr., pp. 136-142. 
  
 [[https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/w_books/4|History of Trinity College]] (1967) by Glenn Weaver, pp. 82, 180, 184. [[https://digitalrepository.trincoll.edu/w_books/4|History of Trinity College]] (1967) by Glenn Weaver, pp. 82, 180, 184.
brownell_hall.1689097110.txt.gz · Last modified: by bant06