Campus maps in general

The campus map released in February now shows Fahey-McLane and other new campus projects, as well as the new commercial buildings of the South Block, below South Street.

Harvard’s campus map, probably because it is not required to show accessible entrances and parking lots, seems to have a bit more visual appeal.

Princeton has a master plan () that is very well illustrated with maps. Unlike many master plans, it gets right to the details and shows specific sites for future buildings, at least those planned for the near future.

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[Update 11.17.2012: Broken links to Harvard and Princeton replaced.]

More history of former “Dartmouth Indians” nickname

In discussions about the history of Dartmouth’s former “Indian” nickname, mascot, and symbol, the subject of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School never seems to come up. Yet Dartmouth was one of Carlisle’s main football opponents in the early twentieth century, and Dartmouth had little reason to become known as “the Indians” as long as the Carlisle Indians were playing.

Carlisle (Wikipedia) was the dominant team in the east for several years up to the school’s closure in 1918, with “Pop” Warner coaching winning teams that included Jim Thorpe (1911-1912) and others. The phrase “Carlisle Indians” was a shortened reference to the school’s name and a literal description of its teams as well as a nickname that sportswriters used the way they used “Princeton Tigers.”

Dartmouth had a more distant connection to Native America, and students and administrators sometimes tried to make something of it. During events such as the 1901 Webster Centennial celebration or the 1906 Dartmouth Hall dedication, Charles Eastman would portray Samson Occom in a historical pageant or a few students would dress as “Indians” in a torchlight parade. Dartmouth football teams simply were not known as “the Indians,” however — instead they were known as “the Green,” referring to the green color that students had adopted as their sporting color around 1865. Some writers also used non-standard references to Dartmouth’s location in New Hampshire. Some examples from the New York Times:

  • “Princeton met the Green at the Polo Grounds” (“Princeton Plays Dartmouth Team,” October 29, 1910, p. 12; notes that “[t]he Tigers will put forth a stronger team than opposed the [Carlisle] Indians last Week”).
  • “Indians to Play Dartmouth Here” (February 3, 1913, p. 9; describes “the Green Mountain team”).
  • “Indians Best Against Dartmouth” (December 6, 1913, p. 12).
  • “Indians Smother Dartmouth, 35-10; Hanoverians No Match for the Wonderful Carlisle Team in Game at the Polo Grounds” (November 16, 1913, p. S1; notes “Green Line Crumples; Indians’ ‘Scoop-Shovel’ and Criss-Cross Attack Deadly”; describes “the New Hampshire mountaineers” and “the Green line”; states that “[t]he Indians showed a concerted smash against the mid-section of the Hanover line.[]”).
  • “Hanover to Claim Football Title; Coach Cavanaugh Says Dartmouth Will Deserve It if Team Beats Indians” (November 14, 1913, p. 12).

Writers continued to refer to the Carlisle Indians into the 1920s. Someone has probably documented the first reference to “the Dartmouth Indians” in this period, once the team could no longer be confused with that of Carlisle. The introduction of “the Dartmouth Indians” might have occurred in bizarre fashion in an article of 1925:

Two of the rapidly dwindling list of undefeated football teams, the White Indians of Dartmouth and the Red Terrors of Cornell, are quietly encamped here on the eve of one of the big struggles of the season. The Green is a slight favorite.

Allison Danzig, “Dartmouth Picked to Defeat Cornell; Eastern Championship May Depend on Clash of Unbeaten Teams at Hanover Today. All Ithacans in Shape; Only Smith Out of Green Line-Up — 15,000 to See Game on Field Expected to Be Good,” New York Times (November 7, 1925, p. S10) (emphasis added).

[Update 10.14.2007: year of Dartmouth Hall dedication corrected from 1904 to 1906 and Webster Centennial example added.]

Large urban redevelopments at other schools

A major theme of campus planning in the early twentieth century seems to be the redevelopment by a college or university of a large discontiguous tract. Whether for purposes that are mostly or partly non-academic, the common characteristic is the form: a treelined urban grid, not an academic campus of connected grassy spaces. The South Block project in Hanover (purchased 1998, redeveloped 2005-2007) is one example. Penn has its parcel, Columbia is pursuing its huge work north of its campus (see Plan NYC; pdf map), Yale just purchased a suburban pharmaceutical research park, and Harvard is beginning its Allston redevelopment (map; aerial rendering; Globe article). Allston might be the largest of the group, and it is meant to be “sustainable.”

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[Update 11.17.2012: Broken link to Allston items, sustainability page, and article below removed.]
[Update 11.17.2007: An August article by Jeff Stahl in Urban Land (pdf) covers this trend.]

Interim dining hall tidbit

Is the temporary dining hall going to be an inflated bubble? Athletic departments put bubbles over playing fields sometimes, and Dartmouth seems to have considered it, but a May article (cached version) in The Dartmouth Independent described the upcoming interim dining hall as “a temporary ‘bubble-like’ facility serving the two-year interim.”

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[Update 11.12.2012: Broken link to article replaced with link to cached version.]

The steam tunnel continues

Dartmouth’s steam tunnel continues to stretch northward. A thumbnail sketch:

  • From Heating Plant along the Green to the Berry site (mid-1990s)
  • From Berry site up Berry Row to Moore (around 1998)
  • From Moore, tap into historic hospital tunnel network to reach Kellogg Auditorium and adjoining chiller plant (early 2000s?)
  • From Kellogg, run northward behind Medical School to future Life Sciences Building site (2007).

Name change of campus firm (Atkin Olshin Schade)

Atkin Olshin Lawson-Bell Architects is now Atkin Olshin Schade and presently features features Collis and Fahey-McLane on its front page.

The firm’s Collis page has some new photos, including one showing the Lone Pine Tavern. The only detailed plan of the Hitchcock renovation yet available is on the site as well.

Hanover High renovated

The Hanover High complex, including the adjacent middle school, has reopened after a major Banwell renovation. The mechanical contractor has images (High School, more) and the Valley News has a story. The town improved the high school as an alternative to swapping the building with Dartmouth and building a new school north of town.

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[Update 11.12.2012: Broken link to news article removed, broken link to Banwell site replaced.]

Photo updates for construction projects

The OPDC has posted photos of the progress on the new Varsity House (one of the photos shows Memorial Field in the context of the campus), the Montgomery House renovation (check the pondside facade), and the Soccer Field (with the turf in place and grandstand going in).

Most notable are the photos of the landscaping between Berry and Maynard Street, or Berry Row. See the substantial walkway that organizes the whole project, for example.

The campus enters Google Earth

Google held a contest to encourage students to help populate its rendition of the Earth with three-dimensional building models. Dartmouth’s team was one of the winners (The Dartmouth; news release) and the models have since been placed on the globe for all to see.

The news release explains Dartmouth’s extra attention to history and suggests an eventual grand global GIS:

The Dartmouth team went a step beyond the contest’s expectations to create three separate timelines, 1800, 1900 and 2007, to illustrate how the campus has grown and changed. With input from the Office of Planning, Design & Construction, accompanying material for each building explains when it was built, what it’s used for, who the architect was, and when it was renovated.

Second Life already contains a superb downtown Hanover; someone must be thinking about putting it into Google Earth.

Inuksuk on McNutt’s lawn

Artist Peter Irniq (Wikipedia) erected an inuksuk (Wikipedia) on McNutt’s lawn for the Hood Museum (Dartmouth Life; Hood News).

His coat of arms features an inuksuk.

(The Hood has been busy lately, also acquiring, at Sotheby’s, Pompeo Batoni’s 1756 portrait of William Legge, the second earl of Dartmouth.)

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[Update 08.12.2017: Arms image and Wikipedia link removed, replaced with Canadian Bureau of Heraldry link.]

[Update 01.13.2013: Broken link to arms replaced.]