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Bolton Building Information. Bolton Hall is open Monday-Friday, 8 a.m.-5 p.m. Departmental contact information is as follows: Office of the Department of Communication: 979-845-5500. Sandra Maldonado (Business Administrator) sandra-m@tamu.edu, 979-862-2530. Hart Blanton (Professor & Head)
Bolton Hall was constructed in 1912 as the Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Building. Bolton is located across from Nagle Hall in the Academic Plaza. The facades are mirror images except for posts on either side of Bolton entryway's steps.
Home of the 12th Man. The Official Texas A&M Aggie Map, a tool made for students, staff, faculty, and visitors for finding administration and classroom buildings, parking lots, and campus facilities.
Originally constructed as the Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Building, Bolton Hall was renamed in 1939 after Texas A&M President Frank C. Bolton. In 1989, Bolton Hall was renovated for the Department of Political Science.
Bolton Hall was constructed in 1912 as the Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Building. Bolton is located across from Nagle Hall in the Academic Plaza. The facades are mirror images except for posts on either side of Bolton entryway's steps.
Bolton Hall (1912) was originally the Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Building. It was designed to mirror Nagle Hall, and with Old Main (burned in 1912) formed the heart of old A&M’s Academic Quadrangle.
Locations & Buildings Academic Building (ACAD) Anthropology Building (ANTH) Bolton Hall (BLTN) Coke Building (COKE) Glasscock Center for Humanities Research (GCHR) Heaton Hall (HEAT) Heep Laboratory Building (HLB) Interdisciplinary Life Sciences Building (ILSB) Liberal Arts and Arts & Humanities Building (LAAH) Milner Hall (MILN) Psychology ...
Bolton Hall. This image of Bolton Hall was taken around 1960, and the nearby Century Tree can be seen on the right. Bolton Hall was built in 1912, and was the original mechanical and electrical engineering building on campus. It was named after President Frank C. Bolton in 1939.
Historic Bolton Hall on the Texas A&M University campus in College Station, Texas. The Beaux Arts style building was constructed in 1911 as the Mechanical and Electrical Engineering Building. In 1939 it was named after President Frank C. Bolton.
Built in 1912 and the heart of the old Texas A&M Academic Quadrangle, Bolton Hall stands today as the home for many classes for the College of Arts and Sciences, including the Department of Communication & Journalism. The building was named after President Frank C. Bolton, affectionately known as “Bear Tracks” Bolton.