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Johnson Hall State Historic Site was the home of Sir William Johnson (1715–1774) an Irish pioneer who became the influential British Superintendent of Indian Affairs in the Province of New York, known for his strong relationship especially with the Mohawk and other Iroquois League nations.
University of Vermont: Burlington: Public Research university: 14,320 1791 Vermont College of Fine Arts: Montpelier (online only) Private Art school: 223 1831 [12] Vermont Law and Graduate School: South Royalton: Private Law school: 690 1972 [13] Vermont State University: Multiple Public Master's university: 5,136 2023
This category includes various buildings and other structures located on the University of Vermont campus in Burlington, Vermont. The main article for this category is List of University of Vermont buildings .
On the east side of the green are some of the university's finest buildings, including the Ira Allen Chapel (1926, McKim, Meade & White), the Billings Memorial Library (1883, H.H. Richardson), Williams Hall (1884, Wilson Brothers), the Old Mill (1825), the university's oldest surviving building, and Morrill Hall (1907, C.W. Buckham). The short ...
Johnson House is a campus building of the University of Vermont (UVM), which is located at 617 Main Street, on the southwestern corner of the intersection of University Heights in Burlington, Vermont. It was built in 1806 as part of a 22-acre farm by Moses Catlin on the parcel where Morrill Hall currently stands.
2.19 New York. 2.20 North Carolina. ... Johnson Hall (Salem) William H. Johnson House, ... Johnson House (University of Vermont), Burlington;
William Samuel Johnson (1727-1819), American jurist, statesman and educator. Both the college and the town are named for him. Painted by Gilbert Stuart.. The town of Johnson, and a part of neighboring Cambridge, Vermont together once made up the King's College Tract, a land grant chartered by King George III in 1774 for the eventual expansion of King's College in New York, today's Columbia ...
Buell's estate buildings were designed by Herbert C Burdett of Buffalo, New York, who had previously worked for both H.H. Richardson and the firm of Hartwell and Richardson. The early additions to the Redstone Campus made by the university were done in collaboration with McKim, Mead & White, and include Southwick Hall and Slade Hall. [2]