enow.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: harvard college dorms history major requirements

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of Harvard College freshman dormitories - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Harvard_College...

    South of Harvard Yard on Holyoke Street, Apley Court has the most spacious rooms among the freshman dorms; accommodations include marble bathrooms. Formerly part of Adams House , it is the only one of the Gold Coast apartment buildings – luxurious private apartments built south of the Yard in the late 1890s – to now be a freshman dormitory.

  3. Holworthy Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holworthy_Hall

    the entryway of Holworthy East. Holworthy was named in 1812 in honor of a wealthy English merchant, Sir Matthew Holworthy, who died in 1678 having bequeathed £1,000 to Harvard — then the largest donation in the college's history — "for the promotion of learning and the promulgation of the Gospel" in Cambridge.

  4. Eliot House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eliot_House

    Before Harvard opted to use a lottery system to assign residences to upperclassmen (beginning with the class of 1999), Eliot was known as a 'prep' house, providing accommodation to the university's social elite, and being known as "more Harvard than Harvard".

  5. Adams House (Harvard College) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adams_House_(Harvard_College)

    A sign above the main entrance to Adams House at 26 Plympton St, commemorating the annual college Housing Day for freshman. It reads, "If you lived in Adams House you'd be home now" and contains the house shield. Like all the other Houses at Harvard, Adams possesses its own coat of arms: Adams' is derived from an 1838 seal ring of John Quincy ...

  6. Harvard College - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvard_College

    Harvard College's first building, as imagined by historian Samuel Eliot Morison [5] Harvard during the colonial era. Harvard College was founded in 1636 by vote of the Great and General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Two years later, the college became home to North America's first known printing press, carried by the ship John of London.

  7. Kirkland House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kirkland_House

    Before Harvard opted to use a lottery system to assign housing to upperclassmen, Kirkland was considered the "jock house" because its location near Anderson Bridge and the Soldiers Field made it a desirable home and convenient place to dine for Harvard athletes. The Kirkland House Boat Club last won the Agassiz Cup in 2003

  8. Cabot House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabot_House

    Cabot House is one of twelve undergraduate residential Houses at Harvard University.Cabot House derives from the merger in 1970 of Radcliffe College's South and East House, which took the name South House (also known as "SoHo"), until the name was changed and the House reincorporated in 1984 to honor Harvard benefactors Thomas Cabot and Virginia Cabot. [1]

  9. Mather House (Harvard College) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mather_House_(Harvard_College)

    Portrait of Increase Mather, namesake of Mather House, by Joan van der Spriet.. Opened in 1970, Mather House is the most recently constructed of Harvard's houses. It takes its name from Increase Mather, a Harvard alumnus and prominent Puritan minister in the Massachusetts Bay Colony who served as the University's president from 1685 to 1692.

  1. Ad

    related to: harvard college dorms history major requirements