Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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.
O'Brien referenced his time in Holworthy during his Class Day speech to the Harvard Class of 2000. [4] Henry Adams, journalist and novelist, Room 5 [5] James Barr Ames, former Harvard Law School dean, Rooms 14 and 20 [1] Horatio Alger, novelist, Rooms 07, 18, and 24 [1] [5] George Bancroft, statesman and historian, Room 24 [1]
Eliot House is one of twelve undergraduate residential Houses at Harvard University.It is one of the seven original houses at the college. Opened in 1931, the house was named after Charles William Eliot, who served as president of the university for forty years (1869–1909).
These are the twelve upperclass undergraduate Houses of Harvard University. See also: List of residential colleges. Pages in category "Harvard Houses"
kirkland.harvard.edu Kirkland House is one of twelve undergraduate residential Houses at Harvard University , located near the Charles River in Cambridge, Massachusetts . It was named after John Thornton Kirkland , president of Harvard University from 1810 to 1828.
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.
Quincy House (/ ˈ k w ɪ n z i /) is one of twelve undergraduate residential Houses at Harvard University, located on Plympton Street between Harvard Yard and the Charles River.The second largest of the twelve undergraduate houses, Quincy House was named after Josiah Quincy III (1772–1864), president of Harvard from 1829 to 1845. [1]
currier.harvard.edu Currier House is one of twelve undergraduate residential Houses of Harvard College , in Cambridge, Massachusetts , United States. Opened in September 1970, it is named after Audrey Bruce Currier, a member of the Radcliffe College Class of 1956 who, along with her husband, was killed in a plane crash in 1967.