Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The building was first purchased by SU in 1943, then sold to Kappa Phi Delta and then repurchased after the frat chapter folded in 2002. [3] 426 Ostrom Ave (Psychology Research Building) 1875 426 Ostrom Ave Houses Psychology Research Building of Syracuse University. Purchased by SU in July 1979. Alibrandi Catholic Center 1982 110 Walnut Place
[3] [2] It was the first building constructed on the Syracuse University campus and the building originally housed the entire university. [4] The building's cornerstone was laid on August 31, 1871, by Jesse Truesdell Peck, and the building was dedicated on May 8, 1873, by Edmund S. James, then Bishop of the New York Conference. [5] [3] It is ...
The name assigned in the listing was "Syracuse University-Comstock Tract Buildings". Included in the registration are 15 buildings, all located on the original Syracuse University campus, a tract of land originally donated by George F. Comstock. The buildings include what has been known as the "Old Row". [2] Archbold Gymnasium (1907) Bowne Hall ...
This page was last edited on 27 December 2023, at 00:58 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
The Hall of Languages was the first building on the Syracuse University campus. Crouse College, a Romanesque building completed in 1889, housed the first College of Fine Arts in the U.S. It is now the home of the Setnor School of Music. In the late 1880s, the university engaged in a rapid building spree.
Syracuse University buildings (1 C, 47 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in Syracuse, New York" The following 41 pages are in this category, out of 41 total.
Old Oval, also called The Oval or University Oval, was a multi-purpose stadium in Syracuse, New York. The field, located open field south of the Hall of Languages , opened in 1895 and was the first on-campus home to the Syracuse Orangemen [ a ] football team prior to the opening of Archbold Stadium in 1907.
Postcard of the gymnasium c. 1916, next to the Archibald Stadium.. It was built in 1908 with $400,000 donated by John Dustin Archbold, [7] [8] a major benefactor of the university, who also funded the building of Archbold Stadium, just to the west of the gymnasium (now the site of the Carrier Dome).