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old_campus [2024/02/05 19:46] bant07old_campus [2024/04/10 19:19] (current) – [Final Years] bant06
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 {{tag>places students}} {{tag>places students}}
 ====== Original Campus ====== ====== Original Campus ======
-[{{ :photographer-trinitycollegeold-ca_1870.jpg?300|Facade of Trinity College Old Campus buildings: (left to right) Jarvis Hall (1825-1878), Seabury Hall (1825-1878) and Brownell Hall (1845-ca.1877). Photo credit: [[https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.33120317|Trinity College Archives]]}}] +[{{ :33120317.jpg?400|Facade of Trinity College Old Campus buildings: (left to right) Jarvis Hall (1825-1878), Seabury Hall (1825-1878) and Brownell Hall (1845-ca.1877).}}]
-[{{ :streetview.png?300|The same view today. Photo Credit: Google Maps.}}]+
  
 Trinity College's first campus was located in downtown [[hartford|Hartford]] on the site of the present State Capitol Building. Initially named [[washington_college|Washington College]], the campus consisted of three buildings. For 50 years, "College Hill" was a defining feature of downtown Hartford until the City purchased the land to build the State Capitol. The three College buildings were demolished in 1878, and Trinity moved to its current location on [[summit_campus|Summit Street]]. Today, Trinity Street marks the "front entrance" of the old College campus. Trinity College's first campus was located in downtown [[hartford|Hartford]] on the site of the present State Capitol Building. Initially named [[washington_college|Washington College]], the campus consisted of three buildings. For 50 years, "College Hill" was a defining feature of downtown Hartford until the City purchased the land to build the State Capitol. The three College buildings were demolished in 1878, and Trinity moved to its current location on [[summit_campus|Summit Street]]. Today, Trinity Street marks the "front entrance" of the old College campus.
  
-The College's site was chosen from a pool of three towns: Hartford, Middletown, and New Haven. During a fundraising campaign, Hartford pledged far more than other towns, and in a [[trustees|Trustees]] vote on May 6, 1824, Hartford won with nine votes (against Middletown's five and New Haven's two). A committee was appointed to select the site of the College, and the men chose a 14-acre piece of land called the Whiting-Seymour place, "on West street fronting Buckingham Street about one-hundred rods west of the South Meetinghouse." The lot was purchased for $4,000.+The College's site was chosen from a pool of three towns: Hartford, Middletown, and New Haven. During a fundraising campaign, Hartford pledged far more than other towns, and in a [[trustees|Trustees]] vote on May 6, 1824, Hartford won with nine votes (against Middletown's five and New Haven's two). A committee was appointed to select the site of the College, and the men chose a 14-acre piece of land called the Whiting-Seymour place, "on West street fronting Buckingham Street about one-hundred rods west of the South Meetinghouse." The lot was purchased for $4,000 (about $106,000 today).
  
 Washington College's first term of classes began September 23, 1824, but the college buildings were still under construction, so course instruction began in the basement of the Baptist Meeting House at Temple and Market Streets, and a private house on Main Street was taken over as a dormitory.  Washington College's first term of classes began September 23, 1824, but the college buildings were still under construction, so course instruction began in the basement of the Baptist Meeting House at Temple and Market Streets, and a private house on Main Street was taken over as a dormitory. 
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 ===== Buildings ===== ===== Buildings =====
  
-Derivative of Yale College's "Old Brick Row," a campus plan that was implemented by many New England Colleges in the early 19th century,((Tolles, p. 137)) the original campus plan consisted of a [[chapel|chapel]] flanked by two identical dormitories. Two of the buildings, the "[[jarvis_hall_old_campus|College]]" and the Chapel, were constructed quickly and completed by 1825. In 1845, the third building was erected opposite the Chapel, completing the original vision of College Hill in Hartford+Derivative of Yale College's "Old Brick Row," a campus plan that was implemented by many New England Colleges in the early 19th century,((Tolles, p. 137)) the original campus plan consisted of a chapel flanked by two identical dormitories. Two of the buildings, called the College and the Chapel, were constructed quickly and completed by 1825, but remained unnamed until the third and final building was erected in 1845.
  
-Trinity's buildings were constructed of wood and brownstone in the Ionic order / Greek Revival style. This was unusual for [[episcopal|Episcopalians]], who typically favored Gothic style; for example, Christ Church Cathedral in Hartford (1827) was one of the earliest known examples of Gothic Revival architecture in the United States. 17th and 18th century Colleges in the United States first used the Federal style, but Greek Revival became the preferred style for academia during the early 19th century. Colleges including Yale, Brown, Amherst, Bates, Bowdoin, Dartmouth, Middlebury, Wesleyan and Williams utilized it as they added to or built their first constructions during the 1820s-1840s. ((Tolles, p. 214))+Trinity's buildings were constructed of yellow pine and brownstone in the Ionic order / Greek Revival style. This was unusual for [[episcopal|Episcopalians]], who typically favored Gothic style; for example, Christ Church Cathedral in Hartford (1827) was one of the earliest known examples of Gothic Revival architecture in the United States. 17th and 18th century Colleges in the United States first used the Federal style, but Greek Revival became the preferred style for academia during the early 19th century. Colleges including Yale, Brown, Amherst, Bates, Bowdoin, Dartmouth, Middlebury, Wesleyan and Williams utilized it as they added to or built their first constructions during the 1820s-1840s. ((Tolles, p. 214))
 [{{:arch005.jpg?400 |Plan for Washington College by Solomon Willard, ca. 1824.}}] [{{:arch005.jpg?400 |Plan for Washington College by Solomon Willard, ca. 1824.}}]
  
-1845 was a momentous year for the College, as its name changed, the third building in the row plan was completedand the buildings were named: the "College" was named Jarvis Hall and contained dormitories and [[clubs|club]] rooms to support 100 students; the central building was named [[seabury_hall_old_campus|Seabury]] and contained the Chapel, [[library|library]], [[museum_of_natural_history|Cabinet (Natural History Museum)]], dormitories and classrooms;  and the newest building was called [[brownell_hall|Brownell]], which contained 38 student rooms, a recitation hall, and faculty apartments. "The whole front of Trinity College is 450 feet in extent," the //Hartford Courant// wrote on November 23, 1846. "Other institutions, as Yale and Harvard, have a greater number of separate edifices, but we know of no single mass more solid and imposing."  +1845 was a momentous year for the College. Not only did it change its name to Trinity Collegebut the third building was erectedcompleting the vision of College Hill in Hartford, and all three buildings received their names. the "College" was named [[jarvis_hall_old_campus|Jarvis Hall]] and contained dormitories and [[clubs|club]] rooms to support 100 students; the central building was named [[seabury_hall_old_campus|Seabury]] and contained the Chapel, [[library|library]], [[museum_of_natural_history|Cabinet (Natural History Museum)]], dormitories and classrooms;  and the newest building was called [[brownell_hall|Brownell]] and contained 38 student rooms, a recitation hall, and faculty apartments. "The whole front of Trinity College is 450 feet in extent," the //Hartford Courant// wrote on November 23, 1846. "Other institutions, as Yale and Harvard, have a greater number of separate edifices, but we know of no single mass more solid and imposing." 
  
 Jarvis Hall was designed by Solomon Willard, the architect of the Bunker Hill Monument. According to Trinity legend, as relayed by various sources including alumni Maitland Armstrong, Class of 1858, and W.C. Brocklesby, Class of 1869, Seabury Hall was designed by Samuel Morse, the inventor of the telegraph. However, there is no substantial evidence to support Morse's involvement in designing the campus or that he had dabbled in architecture at all. Willard, rather, is most likely to have designed both buildings. He was a practiced architect during the 1820-1840s period, and did construct in Greek Revival. Brownell Hall was likely designed by [[totten_silas|Silas Totten]], and drew inspiration from Willard's original drawings. ((Tolles, p. 140.)) Jarvis Hall was designed by Solomon Willard, the architect of the Bunker Hill Monument. According to Trinity legend, as relayed by various sources including alumni Maitland Armstrong, Class of 1858, and W.C. Brocklesby, Class of 1869, Seabury Hall was designed by Samuel Morse, the inventor of the telegraph. However, there is no substantial evidence to support Morse's involvement in designing the campus or that he had dabbled in architecture at all. Willard, rather, is most likely to have designed both buildings. He was a practiced architect during the 1820-1840s period, and did construct in Greek Revival. Brownell Hall was likely designed by [[totten_silas|Silas Totten]], and drew inspiration from Willard's original drawings. ((Tolles, p. 140.))
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 With the college buildings constructed, students flocked to occupy the on-campus dormitories. Student rooms which measured 12 x 20 feet "were considered spacious and even luxurious compared with the off-campus, temporary quarters first occupied by Washington College students." ((Tolles, p. 138)) Heated by a coal stove and lit with kerosene lamps, the rooms were divided into sleeping and common areas by a curtain. Running water was not introduced to campus until 1856, and as such, rooms contained chamber pots and water had to be acquired by a common well.  With the college buildings constructed, students flocked to occupy the on-campus dormitories. Student rooms which measured 12 x 20 feet "were considered spacious and even luxurious compared with the off-campus, temporary quarters first occupied by Washington College students." ((Tolles, p. 138)) Heated by a coal stove and lit with kerosene lamps, the rooms were divided into sleeping and common areas by a curtain. Running water was not introduced to campus until 1856, and as such, rooms contained chamber pots and water had to be acquired by a common well. 
  
-Students arrived in Hartford in the early days either by steamboat, which took them up the Connecticut River, or stagecoach, as there was no railroad. The boys were expected to provide their own furniture, which sometimes meant acquiring used items from stores in Hartford or buying from prior students. Nearby houses, often owned by widows, were often boarded to Trinity students and meals were provided to them, as the College did not do so. According to Robert Tomes, Class of 1839: +Students arrived in Hartford in the early days either by steamboat, which took them up the Connecticut River, stagecoach or horsecaruntil railroad was constructed in the 1830s. The boys were expected to provide their own furniture, which sometimes meant acquiring used items from stores in Hartford or buying from prior students. Nearby houses, often owned by widows, were often boarded to Trinity students and meals were provided to them, as the College did not do so. According to Robert Tomes, Class of 1839: 
  
 //For one dollar and seventy-five cents a week, the highest price charged, these hungry youths were supplied daily with three substantial meals, at every one of which there was a satisfactory allowance of meat, while in addition there never was wanting a plenitude of mush and milk, buckwheat, Indian cakes and slap-jacks, apple, pumpkin, and mince pies, codfish balls, and all the other delectable contrivances of the ingenious culinary art of New England.// //For one dollar and seventy-five cents a week, the highest price charged, these hungry youths were supplied daily with three substantial meals, at every one of which there was a satisfactory allowance of meat, while in addition there never was wanting a plenitude of mush and milk, buckwheat, Indian cakes and slap-jacks, apple, pumpkin, and mince pies, codfish balls, and all the other delectable contrivances of the ingenious culinary art of New England.//
  
-Robert Tomes, a classmate of [[williams_john|Rev. John Williams]], entered Washington College in 1835 and his first impression of the buildings "built of rough-hewn stone, was by no means cheerful." He was one of 17 freshmen, but his class had "dwindled down" to a mere 10 by senior year. As a freshman, Tomes described that he occupied the first floor of Jarvis Hall. The College, not ten years old, was described as "rough battered," with stone sill, steps, and hallway. Tomes described his sinking feeling as he entered his dorm room for the first time: "such an aspect of solitary blankness was presented by the rudely planked floor, and the stained and broken plaster of the ceiling and walls of the long empty and neglected room."+Robert Tomes, a classmate of [[williams_john|Rev. John Williams]], entered Washington College in 1835 and his first impression of the buildings "built of rough-hewn stone, was by no means cheerful." He was one of 17 freshmen, but his class had "dwindled down" to a mere 10 by senior year. As a freshman, Tomes occupied the first floor of Jarvis Hall. The College, only twelve years old, was "rough battered," with stone sill, steps, and hallway. Tomes described his sinking feeling as he entered his dorm room for the first time: "such an aspect of solitary blankness was presented by the rudely planked floor, and the stained and broken plaster of the ceiling and walls of the long empty and neglected room."
  
 [{{ :530831.jpg?direct&400|Trinity College Old Campus, Brownell Hall (1845-ca.1877), interior: Suite No. 18 with William G. Mather '77 on rocking chair and Joseph Buffington '75 on sofa. W. G. Mather was donor of Trinity College Chapel and his bequest funded [[mather_hall|Mather Student Center]]; J. Buffington was the creator of the Trinity College Bantam [[bantam|mascot.]] Photo credit:[[https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.2661605|Trinity College Archives]]}}] [{{ :530831.jpg?direct&400|Trinity College Old Campus, Brownell Hall (1845-ca.1877), interior: Suite No. 18 with William G. Mather '77 on rocking chair and Joseph Buffington '75 on sofa. W. G. Mather was donor of Trinity College Chapel and his bequest funded [[mather_hall|Mather Student Center]]; J. Buffington was the creator of the Trinity College Bantam [[bantam|mascot.]] Photo credit:[[https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.2661605|Trinity College Archives]]}}]
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 At the time Tomes attended, the grounds, which were "picturesque" were also "very much neglected," filled with overgrown weeds. The [[botanical_garden_and_greenhouse|botanical garden]] was unkempt and forgotten as well. Many of Tomes' classmates were much older than him, having chosen to attend the College "already been engaged in various trades and pursuits of life, as is common in New England Colleges."  At the time Tomes attended, the grounds, which were "picturesque" were also "very much neglected," filled with overgrown weeds. The [[botanical_garden_and_greenhouse|botanical garden]] was unkempt and forgotten as well. Many of Tomes' classmates were much older than him, having chosen to attend the College "already been engaged in various trades and pursuits of life, as is common in New England Colleges." 
  
-Student Maitland Armstrong, Class of 1858, recalled leaving his wick lit while refilling a camphene lamp in Jarvis Hall: "it exploded, and can, lamp, and all shot across the room, leaving a trail of fire behind it and burning a broad swath in the carpet." Charles H. Proctor, Class of 1873, reminisced about his dorm room in his publication on //The Life of James Williams//; he recalled that his Franklin stove's pipe had a chalk skeleton drawn on it, and some student before him had written "liberty" across the ceiling.+Student Maitland Armstrong, Class of 1858, recalled leaving his wick lit while refilling a camphene lamp in Jarvis Hall: "it exploded, and can, lamp, and all shot across the room, leaving a trail of fire behind it and burning a broad swath in the carpet." Charles H. Proctor, Class of 1873, reminisced that his Franklin stove's pipe had a chalk skeleton drawn on it, and some student before him had written "liberty" across the ceiling. ((//The Life of James Williams//))
  
-In the early days, the academic year was divided into three [[terms|terms]]: Fall, Spring, and Summer. Students followed a strict schedule, structured by the toll of the Chapel Bell, which commanded them to get up, go to morning prayer, go to class, go to evening prayer, and go to bed. However, students were forbidden to enter buildings before the bell tolled or to stay late; while in classes they were "to maintain a becoming posture; they are not to talk, whisper, or cause any manner of disturbance. They are to be seated in the order of the Catalogue, and retire from the rooms in such order as the Faculty shall direct." The students were expected to remain in their rooms during study hours and to refrain from "amusements and all noise which may cause interruption." In a militaristic fashion, the students were expected to stand when an officer or Trustee entered a room, and were not permitted to have student gatherings or sing without the [[presidents|President]] of the College's approval. Armstrong also relayed that, in the winter, students had to make their way through the dark to morning prayer and often brought small pieces of candle as lights while they trudged in the snow at 6 a.m. to morning Chapel. +In the early days, the academic year was divided into three [[terms|terms]]: Fall, Spring, and Summer. Students followed a strict schedule, structured by the toll of the Chapel [[bell|bell]], which commanded them to get up, go to morning prayer, go to class, go to evening prayer, and go to bed. However, students were forbidden to enter buildings before the bell tolled or to stay late; while in classes they were "to maintain a becoming posture; they are not to talk, whisper, or cause any manner of disturbance. They are to be seated in the order of the Catalogue, and retire from the rooms in such order as the Faculty shall direct." The students were expected to remain in their rooms during study hours and to refrain from "amusements and all noise which may cause interruption." In a militaristic fashion, the students were expected to stand when an officer or Trustee entered a room, and were not permitted to have student gatherings or sing without the [[presidents|President]] of the College's approval. Armstrong also relayed that, in the winter, students had to make their way through the dark to morning prayer and often brought small pieces of candle as lights while they trudged in the snow at 6 a.m. to morning Chapel. 
  
 However, the rules did not stop the students from enjoying fun together in the dormitories and out on the town. According to Robert Tomes, during the 1830s: However, the rules did not stop the students from enjoying fun together in the dormitories and out on the town. According to Robert Tomes, during the 1830s:
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 [{{ :oldcampus_destruction.jpg?300|Trinity College Old Campus, View from northeast of demolition of Jarvis Hall (1825-1878) and Seabury Hall (1825-1878). Photo credit: [[https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.2661603|Trinity College Archives]]}}] [{{ :oldcampus_destruction.jpg?300|Trinity College Old Campus, View from northeast of demolition of Jarvis Hall (1825-1878) and Seabury Hall (1825-1878). Photo credit: [[https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.2661603|Trinity College Archives]]}}]
  
-Members of the Hartford community, too, were unhappy with the decision, and felt the Trustees had "wholly ignored the Hartford public." Community member "X," writing to the //Hartford Courant//, said that the Penfield site would have been the most central location for the campus and was "selected as excelling all others by [[olmsted_frederick_law|Frederick Law Olmsted]]." X also was greatly concerned that the College was no longer "easily accessible to those living here who desire to avail themselves of its advantages...this motive should have controlling weight." ((Hartford Courant, 22 Feb 1873.)) Community member "E" also chastised the decision, saying: "To say the least, the erection of college buildings on any other site [than Penfield] is a grave error," as "there are no advantages, and with no prospect that the location there will influence people of means to come to Hartford to reside for the purpose of educating their sons, or even place their sons at Trinity College in consequence of the unfortunate site selected by the college authorities."((Hartford Courant, 28 Feb 1873.))+Members of the Hartford community, too, were unhappy with the decision, and felt the Trustees had "wholly ignored the Hartford public." Community member "X," writing to the //Hartford Courant//, said that the Penfield site would have been the most central location for the campus and was "selected as excelling all others by [[olmsted_frederick_law|Frederick Law Olmsted]]." X also was greatly concerned that the College was no longer "easily accessible to those living here who desire to avail themselves of its advantages...this motive should have controlling weight." ((//Hartford Courant//, 22 Feb 1873.)) Community member "E" also chastised the decision, saying: "To say the least, the erection of college buildings on any other site [than Penfield] is a grave error," as "there are no advantages, and with no prospect that the location there will influence people of means to come to Hartford to reside for the purpose of educating their sons, or even place their sons at Trinity College in consequence of the unfortunate site selected by the college authorities." ((Hartford Courant, 28 Feb 1873.)) Despite the dissenters, however, the decision was finalized--the Trinity Campus would move to the Rocky Hill site. 
  
-Despite the dissenters, however, the decision was finalized--the Trinity Campus would move to the Rocky Hill site. Excavation work for the new state capitol building began in 1873. Brownell Hall was partially demolished, rendering the west side of campus a large unsightly hole that students would have to deal with for several more years. Abner Jackson, who died unexpectedly in 1874, had worked with architect [[burges_william|William Burges]] to plan an exquisite gothic campus. Despite the initial disgruntlement with the move, the students began to grow excited by the prospect of a huge new dining hall. +==== Final Years ====
  
-The groundbreaking for the new buildings took place on Commencement day: July 1, 1875. By 1878, the first two buildings--part of the [[long_walk|Long Walk]]--were completed. Just like the first College Hill buildings 50 years before, they were named [[seabury_hall|Seabury]] and [[jarvis_hall|Jarvis]]. +Excavation work for the new state capitol building began in 1873. Brownell Hall was partially vacated and demolished, rendering the west side of campus a large unsightly hole. Abner Jackson, who died unexpectedly in 1874, had worked with architect [[burges_william|William Burges]] to plan an exquisite gothic campus. Burges never traveled to America, but worked with American architect Francis Hatch Kimball to revise the campus plans in order to fit within budgetary constraints and the new plot of land. The groundbreaking ceremony for the new buildings took place during 1875 Commencement. By 1878, the first two buildings--part of the [[long_walk|Long Walk]]--were completed. Just like the first College Hill buildings 50 years before, they were named [[seabury_hall|Seabury]] and [[jarvis_hall|Jarvis]]. 
  
-The College Hill buildings stood until 1878, when a final Commencement was held on the old campus; afterwards, they were quickly demolished. Though none of the stones used in the old buildings were incorporated into the Summit Campus buildings, a large piece of Portland brownstone was made into a headstone for [[williams_james_h|James Williams]] ("Professor Jim"), who died in May 1878 after nearly 60 years of service to the school. The October 51878 //Tablet// also describes "relic hunters" who collected wood, metal, and stone, but "perhaps the most interesting of all are the canes made from the old staircases. The owner of one of these possesses a genuine treasure.+In its final years of operation, the old campus suffered from exceptionally unruly student behavior
  
-Where College Hill once imposed itself over the Little River, the State Capitol building stands on its foundations. In 1923, the year of Trinity's Centennial, a tablet was erected in one of the Capitol'porticoes memorializing Trinity's original location. +President Thomas Pynchon wrote in the 1879 President's Report:  
 + 
 +//As portions of the buildings were taken down, the students were obliged to move into lodgings in the neighbouring streets and were entirely withdrawn from College control and the operation of Rules of Order. During the last years of occupancy (of the old campus) all the more wealthy students, i.e. all those who especially required control, were living outside, not singly, but gathered in large bodies, in houses which they completely fitted and where they lived entirely without direction from us, so that when we moved to the new buildings a great majority of the students and all the more restless ones had never been under the control of any College rules of order except those which governed the Chapel and the Recitation rooms and were unaware practically that there were any such rules in existence. This complicated the problem very much...it would require at least three years or until all the students who had ever lived under the old regime, at the old campus, had graduated before the College could be brought into a thoroughly well-ordered condition.// 
 + 
 +The students were noisy and often took to venturing into the city and playing music or singing, their favorite pastimes. In an unprecedented move, faculty brought down an edict forbidding all singing, which kicked off a struggle between themselves and the raucous and rebellious students. As students became more disobedient and destructive, faculty became stricter, which only worsened their behavior in a vicious cycle that continued for months. The students (primarily freshmen) hung skeletons in front of the Chapel, brought kittens to chapel, tore down bulletin boards, participated in forbidden [[rushes|hat rush]], plugged gas burners, rang the bell late at night, and lit bonfires. ((Scrapbook of Charles W. Freeland)) In March 1878, the students went on a rampage tearing down bulletin boards, rendering the College [[bell|bell]] defunct, and skipping or "cutting" mandatory chapel. Freshmen participated in a forbidden [[rushes|hat rush]] and lit bonfires. The students skipped classes and marched through Hartford, singing. As a result, many students were fined, suspended, or had their scholarships revoked. As Pynchon stated in his report, this behavior continued even after the move to the new campus, with administrators struggling to contain it.  
 + 
 +At the same time, the student body suffered two tragic deaths. Joseph Mosgrove Truby, Class of 1879, died on September 15, 1877 "after a very brief illness." ((Trinity Tablet, 12/08/1877)) A [[pew_ends|pew end]] in the Chapel is dedicated to him, and "represents...young Truby sitting at his desk at the College with the hour-glass almost run out and his candle guttering in its socket." ((Trinity //Reporter//, September 1940)). Edward Ingersoll Warren, Class of 1880, died of peritonitis on April 8, 1878, after being sick for several days. On Monday, May 21, [[staff|James Williams]] ("Professor Jim"), died after nearly 60 years of service to the school. Other students that spring season suffered from pneumonia and pleurisy, but recovered. 
 + 
 +A final commencement was held on the old campus in 1878, after which the College Hill buildings were quickly demolished. Though none of the stones used in the old buildings were incorporated into the Summit Campus buildings, a large piece of Portland brownstone was made into a headstone for Williams. The October 5, 1878 //Tablet// also describes "relic hunters" who collected wood, metal, and stone, but "perhaps the most interesting of all are the canes made from the old staircases. The owner of one of these possesses a genuine treasure."  
 + 
 +Where College Hill once imposed itself over the Little River, the State Capitol building stands on its foundations. In 1923, the year of Trinity's Centennial, a tablet was erected in the State Capitol'East portico facing Trinity Street, memorializing the College's original location. 
  
 ===== Bits and Pieces ===== ===== Bits and Pieces =====
-[{{:screenshot_160_.png?direct&300 |The cornerstone of the original Brownell Hallcurrently mounted in the Downes Clock Tower. Photo credit: Amanda Matava, 2022.}}]+[{{ :photographer-trinitycollegeold-ca_1870.jpg?300|The Trinity Campusca. 1870. Photo credit: [[https://www.jstor.org/stable/community.33120317|Trinity College Archives]]}}] 
 +[{{ :streetview.png?300|The same view today. Photo Credit: Google Maps.}}]
  
 Though it has been stated occasionally that no trace of the old campus remained once it was demolished, there are a few bits and pieces that surfaced.  Though it has been stated occasionally that no trace of the old campus remained once it was demolished, there are a few bits and pieces that surfaced. 
  
-  * The old chapel bell, much chagrined by students and the subject of pranks, was moved to the new campus. However, it does not appear that it was ever used, and was gifted to the Cheshire Academy in 1884((Trinity Tablet, May 18, 1878)) +  * The chapel [[bell|bell]], much chagrined by students and the subject of pranks, was moved to the new campus. However, it does not appear that it was ever used, and the Cheshire Academy purchased it in June 1883
-  * The Class of 1872 gifted the old campus a [[sundial|sundial]], which was a fixture that traveled to the new campus. It was located on the quad by the end of Seabury Hall. At some point in the late 19th century, it fell into disrepair and disappeared. A large sundial, the gift of the Class of 1888, was installed near [[williams_memorial|Williams Memorial]] as a replacement.+  * The Class of 1872 gifted the old campus a [[sundial|sundial]], which was a fixture that traveled to the new campus. It was located on the main quad in front of Seabury Hall. At some point in the late 19th century, it fell into disrepair and disappeared. 
   * The [[old_gymnasium|old gymnasium]], which was both adored and despised by students, was dismantled, relocated, and reassembled on the new Trinity campus. It stood until 1896, when a fire destroyed it.    * The [[old_gymnasium|old gymnasium]], which was both adored and despised by students, was dismantled, relocated, and reassembled on the new Trinity campus. It stood until 1896, when a fire destroyed it. 
   * The capital surmounting one of the columns in the façade of the old Seabury Hall was formed into the credence table in the Chapel of Perfect Friendship in the Trinity College Chapel when it was completed in 1932.   * The capital surmounting one of the columns in the façade of the old Seabury Hall was formed into the credence table in the Chapel of Perfect Friendship in the Trinity College Chapel when it was completed in 1932.
old_campus.1707162367.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/02/05 19:46 by bant07