Quincy House

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Quincy House
Harvard College
Image:Quincyheader-1.jpg‎
Image:QHouseHARVARD.jpg‎
Full name {{{college_name}}}
Named after Josiah Quincy III (17721864)
Previous Names {{{previous_names}}}
Established 1959
Sister College Branford College, Yale
House Master Deb and Lee Gherke
Location 58 Plympton Street
http://58plympton.com/home/

This is an article about the residential house at Harvard.

Quincy House is one of the twelve upperclass residential houses of Harvard University, located on Plympton Street between Harvard Yard and the Charles River. Quincy House was named after Josiah Quincy III (17721864), president of Harvard from 1829 to 1845. It is the largest of the twelve undergraduate houses.

Quincy House was the first house built at Harvard since the original seven river houses, and opened in 1959. It is made up of three buildings, each in a different style of architecture:

  • Old Quincy, a neo-Georgian building originally called Mather Hall, which was part of Leverett House until 1960;
  • New Quincy, an eight-story modern residential structure with an adjoining two-story wing that includes the house dining hall and a separate protuberance containing the house library;
  • The 20 DeWolfe St. residence hall, a brick structure with a double mansard roof of lead-coated copper. The 10 and 20 DeWolfe St. residences are shared with Leverett House and Kirkland House.[1]

Quincy House symbolizes the new Harvard, as the first House to be built after the original seven river Houses of the early 1930s under President Lowell. Old Quincy, built in 1929-30 is a neo-Georgian building that had its start as Mather Hall.

Famous Quincy alumni include Phil Bredesen, Rob Cohen, Lou Dobbs, Douglas Feith, Jamie Gorelick, Tom Ridge, and Robert Kirshner.

The house mascot of Quincy House is the Penguin, which was born unto the house in the spring of 2005, selected in a vote over such nominees as the puma and bull terrier. Shortly thereafter, the fearless, though not particularly fear-inspiring, Penguin led Quincy house to victory in the inter-house dodgeball championship, to much rejoicing.

The current masters of Quincy House are Lee Gerhke and Deb Gerhke who served as interim masters for the 2006-2007 academic year.

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