List of Harvard dormitories

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This is a list of dormitories at Harvard College. Only First-Years live in the dormitories. Sophomores, Juniors and Seniors live in the House system.

Contents

[edit] Canaday Hall

Canaday Hall is one of the newest buildings in Harvard Yard. Built in 1974, it is one of the dormitories housing first-year students at Harvard College. When seen from above, the complex of buildings comprising Canaday Hall resemble the shape of a question mark.

Canaday's architecture can be traced back to its period of construction, which immediately followed the student takeover of University Hall in 1969.[1] Fearing further student unrest, College administrators had the various portions of Canaday fireproofed and separated from each other to foil student organizing. Unlike other Harvard freshman dormitories, notably Wigglesworth Hall, students must go outside to access any portion of the building other than their own.

On the other hand, residents of Canaday Hall enjoy the shortest average distance to some of the most important buildings on the Harvard campus, including the Science Center, the aforementioned Memorial Hall, Emerson Hall, Sever Hall, Robinson Hall, the Law School Library, and Widener Library, among others.

Past residents include Paul Wylie, Mira Sorvino, Sean Gullette, and Charles Lane. [2]

[edit] Grays Hall

Grays Hall, Harvard Yard.
Grays Hall, Harvard Yard.

Grays Hall opened in Harvard Yard in 1863 and became Harvard College's first building with water taps in the basement. Residents of other buildings in Harvard Yard had to haul water from pumps in the Yard.

Grays Hall is currently used as a dormitory housing freshmen. Its spacious common rooms and its reputation for housing the sons and daughters of the rich, famous, and royal has earned it the nickname "Harvard Hilton."

Past residents include Norman Mailer, Harpoon Brewery co-founder Daniel Kenary, Natalie Portman, Frank Rich, Jeff Bingaman, Mo Rocca, Michael Weishan, John Weidman, Alan Keyes, and Robert Frost.

[edit] Greenough Hall

Greenough Hall — Located just outside Harvard Yard, Greenough is part of a group of dormitories outside the Yard called the Union Dormitories.

Greenough Hall is a four-floor freshman dormitory divided into one large section in the middle and two smaller alcoves on the sides. The middle sections host double and single rooms in the rear of the building and two-room triples in the front of the building, complete with bay windows. On the sides, rooms are either doubles, singles, and triples, or a six-person suite. There are four bathrooms per floor in Greenough: one in each alcove and two in the middle. Greenough features large windows, large walk-in closets in the triples, and hardwood floors. The dormitory has an elevator at the 10 Prescott Street end of the building. (Greenough is so long it has two house numbers: 10 and 12 Prescott Street.) Close communities form within the dorm, simply because it is so far away from the Yard and Annenberg, the freshman dining hall.

Past residents of Greenough include Elliott Abrams, Wallace Shawn, William Kristol, Laurence Tribe and, more recently, Kaavya Viswanathan.

[edit] Hollis Hall

Hollis Hall, Harvard Yard. March, 1934.  Historic American Buildings Survey, Library of Congress. (Arthur C. Haskell, photographer)
Hollis Hall, Harvard Yard. March, 1934. Historic American Buildings Survey, Library of Congress. (Arthur C. Haskell, photographer)
Hollis Hall.
Hollis Hall.

Hollis Hall, built in 1763, is one of the oldest buildings at Harvard College. It is located in Harvard Yard and faces the statue of John Harvard across the Old Yard.

The building was erected at the expenses of the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1763. It was named in honor of Thomas Hollis of London, a merchant, and other members of the same family, who were generous benefactors of Harvard College from 1719 to 1804.

Hollis Hall was used as barracks by Colonial troops in 1775-76. Occupants of Hollis Hall have included Ralph Waldo Emerson, Wendell Phillips, Charles Francis Adams, Henry David Thoreau, George Santayana, John Updike, Charles Sumner, William Weld, Edward Everett, Joseph P. Kennedy, Horatio Alger, Boisfeuillet Jones, Jr., Jim Cramer.

The Hall has two entryways: Hollis North and Hollis South. Each entryway has 4 floors, with 4 doubles on each floor. Each entryway can therefore house up to 32 students.

Hollis Hall is currently used to house freshmen at the College.

[edit] Holworthy Hall

Holworthy Hall.
Holworthy Hall.

Holworthy was founded in 1812 and was named after Sir Matthew Holworthy, a wealthy merchant, who made what was at the time the largest donation to Harvard in the university's history. Holworthy is a first-year dormitory at Harvard College and is located in Harvard Yard. Housing three entryways, it is the closest dorm to the Science Center. It is the second closest dormitory to Memorial Hall, which houses the freshman dining hall, Annenberg.

Holworthy has the only floorplan of its kind among Harvard dormitories. On each floor of an entryway, there are two suites connected by a ten foot-long hallway and a shared bathroom. Each suite features a large common room, with two double bedrooms. While some residents choose to close the hallway doors, many leave the bathroom hallway open, creating an eight person "megasuite," unmatched by other freshman housing. This provides a built-in social community for the residents within each suites. Each bathroom contains two sinks, two toilets, two showers, and no windows.

Past occupants have included Cornel West, Conan O'Brian and Horatio Alger.

[edit] Pennypacker Hall

Pennypacker Hall
Pennypacker Hall

Pennypacker Hall is part of a group of dormitories outside Harvard Yard called the Union Dormitories. Built in 1927 and acquired by Harvard in 1958, it was named after Henry Pennypacker, a former president of the admissions committee. Originally used as temporary housing, it is now a permanent space for freshmen.

WHRB (95.3FM Cambridge), the campus radio station run exclusively by Harvard students, is given space in the basement of Pennypacker Hall,

Past residents include: Hendrik Hertzberg, Nicholas Kristof, and Chris Wallace.

[edit] Weld Hall

Weld Hall, Harvard Yard. Courtesy of the Frances Loeb Library, Graduate School of Design, Harvard University.
Weld Hall, Harvard Yard. Courtesy of the Frances Loeb Library, Graduate School of Design, Harvard University.

Weld Hall at Harvard College, built in 1870, was the second of two important additions to the Harvard campus designed by the architectural firm Ware & Van Brunt (the first being Memorial Hall).

The building was a gift of William Fletcher Weld in memory of his brother Stephen Minot Weld. Weld Hall represented a new trend toward picturesque silhouettes that became important to American domestic architecture of the later nineteenth century, as can be seen in the Queen Anne style which was popular during the same period.

Past residents include John F. Kennedy, Michael Kinsley, Michael Crichton, Daniel Ellsberg, Christopher Durang, Douglas Feith, Neil H. McElroy, Ben Bernanke and Douglas Kenney.

[edit] Wigglesworth Hall

Wigglesworth Hall
Wigglesworth Hall

Wigglesworth Hall is the second-largest of the dormitories housing first-year students at Harvard College. It is located along the southern edge of Harvard Yard, between Widener Library and Boylston Hall to the north, and Massachusetts Avenue. It was constructed in 1931, and according to Harvard's website, its location "was part of President Lowell's plan to enclose the Yard from the traffic of Harvard Square." The dorm is actually discontiguous, and consists of three buildings: (from east to west) A-D entries (stairwells), a.k.a. "Big Wigg", E-I entries, and J-K entries, a.k.a. "Wigglet" or "Little House on the Prairie."

Past residents include Bill Gates, Sen. Ted Kennedy, Leonard Bernstein, John Lithgow, Robert Lowell, Ben Bradlee, Sen. David Vitter, Pat Toomey, Andre Gregory, Mark Danner, Donald Hodel, Naomi Yang, NPR's Melissa Block, and bestselling author Jared Diamond.


[edit] Other dormitories

[edit] Sources

[edit] References

  1. ^ 1969 Still a Memory, Harvard Crimson, [1]
  2. ^ Dorm History Search, [2]