|
Botany Laboratory, Old Main, North Dakota Agricultural College
|
|
|
|
|
| Title | Botany Laboratory, Old Main, North Dakota Agricultural College |
| Date of Original | between 1902-1903 |
| Creator | Bolley, Henry Luke, 1865-1956
|
| Creator Role | Photographer; |
| Description | View of one desk work area and partial of another in the botany laboratory located in Old Main. Books, jars, and a microscope are visible on one desk. The overhead lighting seems to be a gaslight fixture. |
| Ordering Information | Consult: http://library.ndsu.edu/ndsuarchives/duplication-services |
| General Subject | Colleges & Universities
|
| Subject (LCTGM) | Laboratories Interiors Radiators Chairs Desks Microscopes Stools Gaslight fixtures
|
| Organization Name | North Dakota State University - Buildings North Dakota State University - Classrooms Old Main (Fargo, N.D.)
|
| Location | Fargo (N.D.) Cass County (N.D.) North Dakota United States
|
| Decade | 1900-1909
|
| Item Number | Bol.32.3 |
| Format of Original | Photographic prints
|
| Dimensions of Original | 22 x 29 cm. |
| Place of Publication | Fargo (N.D.)
|
| Transcription | "Bot Lab 1902-3. Main Bd. Registrars Office in 1933, " handwritten on back of photograph. " Main Bd - S.W. Room, now - Registrars End Office, " handwritten on front of photograph. |
| Notes | Title supplied by staff. |
| Biography/History | The first permanent building on the North Dakota Agricultural College (NDAC) campus was College Hall, also called the Administration Building, but more commonly known as Old Main. In February 1891, the North Dakota State Legislature appropriated $25, 000 to erect the structure. Construction of the lower levels were completed by the end of 1891 and on January 3, 1892, the institution opened its regular work in its permanent home, and enrolled 123 students for the term. The lower floor of the building was utilized by the chemical department, as well as containing recitation and work rooms of the biological department, and storage and toilet rooms. The main floor contained the general offices of the college and the experiment station, library and reading room, fireproof vaults, and laboratories and offices of the botanical and veterinary departments. The entire first and second floors were finished in quartered oak. The second floor contained a large auditorium capable of seating 200 people, and the recitation, apparatus and laboratory rooms of the mathematical and physical departments. The third floor was unfinished, but it was put to use as a gymnasium; with boxing, wrestling, and "tug-of-war" as popular forms of exercise, where students and faculty met in many friendly contests. Today, Old Main still houses the President's office in the tower room, as well as the Office of the VP for Academic Affairs, the VP for Business and Finances, the VP for Student Affairs, the Graduate School and numerous other administrative offices. If you get the chance to lift the ceiling tiles in one section of the Graduate School, the facade of the front of the old Little Country Theatre is still there, probably as it was on the day of its last performance. Architectural Information:"Richardson Romanesque; 2 1/2 stories with raised basement; buff brick with base and trim of Duluth brownstone; clock tower/turret at the southeast corner; recessed triple-arched main entrance arcade facing south. Hancock Brothers, architects." (National Register of Historic Places Inventory - Nomination Form, Summer 1982, p.3) |
| Repository Institution | North Dakota State University Libraries, University Archives
|
| Repository Collection | H.L. Bolley Photography Collection
|
| Collection Finding Aid | Consult: http://hdl.handle.net/10365/4766 |
| Credit Line | University Archives, NDSU, Fargo (Bol.32.3) |
| Language | eng; |
| Digital ID | bo000127 |
| Original Source | Photographic Print |
|
|
|
|
|