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Classroom building named for former professor Arvil Ernest Harris. [17] Holderby Hall 1963 Originally South Hall, is a high-rise dormitory completed in 1963 and expanded in 1968. It was named for the original donor of the quarter acre of land in 1837 at the school's founding. [18] INTO Marshall University Building 1943-1947
Old Main is a collection of five buildings joined together at central campus of Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia. [2] It is located at the junction of Hal Greer Boulevard and Fourth Avenue.
John Marshall statue in front of Drinko Library. With the exception of the Old Main building, expansion of the facilities and the college itself did not begin until 1907, when the West Virginia Board of Regents changed the title of the presiding officer from "principal" to "president" and allowed the creation of new college-level departments. [13]
The Memorial Student Center is the student center for Marshall University, in Huntington, West Virginia.The Memorial Student Center, named in memory of the 1970 Marshall football team, who died in a plane crash, was built to house the university bookstore, diversify students meal options, and hold student-run organizations.
The Arthur Weisberg Family Applied Engineering Complex, an applied engineering complex for Marshall University, is located in Huntington, West Virginia.The building opened in 2015 near Pullman Square, to house educational resources for Marshall's College of Information Technology, Mechanical & Electrical Engineering, Mathematics & Computational Science, Computer Modeling & Digital Imaging ...
Marshall Commons is a collection of dormitories, as well as a dining facility, on the south-central campus of Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia, USA. [1] Completed in the fall of 2003, Marshall Commons consists of Gibson, Wellman, Haymaker, and Willis Residence Halls, along with Harless Cafe.
The Robert C. Byrd Biotechnology Science Center biotechnology research and teaching structure on the campus of Marshall University along 3rd Avenue in Huntington, West Virginia. It is named after longtime U.S. Senator Robert C. Byrd, who was a proponent for the project and helped receive funding for its construction.
Marshall University Visual Arts Center (originally known as Anderson Newcomb Co. and Stone & Thomas) is an arts center in Huntington, West Virginia, US, next to Pullman Square. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007 under the Downtown Huntington Historic District .