M. Carey Thomas Library
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Location: | Bounded by Morris, Yarrow, Wyndon and New Gulph Rds., Bryn Mawr College campus, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania |
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Built: | 1922 |
Architect: | Walter Cope; John Stewardson |
Architectural style: | Late Gothic Revival |
Governing body: | Private |
NRHP Reference#: | 91002052 |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP: | July 17, 1991[1] |
Designated NHL: | July 17, 1991[2] |
The M. Carey Thomas Library, named after Bryn Mawr's first Dean and second president, is a former college library in Bryn Mawr College, Pennsylvania. It was in use as a library until 1970, when the Mariam Coffin Canaday Library opened. Today, it is a space for performances, readings, lectures, and public gatherings.
The Great Hall, the reading room of the old library, was designed by Walter Cope (of Cope and Stewardson) in 1901 and built by Stewardson and Jamieson several years later. M. Carey Thomas played a large part in its construction, particularly by taking photographs and doing architectural research on the library's University of Oxford inspirations, and by helping the library's construction survive many hardships, such as Cope's death and financial trouble. Built with ashlar gray stone and lined with coffered oak paneling, the Great Hall was inspired by the dining hall at Wadham College, Oxford and features a king post truss ceiling painted by Lockwood de Forest with geometric renaissance patterns that continue down the wall, ending with tulip-bordered corbels that lie in between large, arch-shaped lead-paned windows, which flood the space with light. The windows' tracery is also modeled after Wadham College's dining hall, though without Wadham's stained glass. This area was renovated and conserved by Voith & Mactavish Architects LLP.[3] Carey Thomas asked Cope specifically, do not "copy the interior plan at any other college, as it was a plan worked out by us at Bryn Mawr for us own individual needs and so far as he and I knew absolutely unique."[4]
The Great Hall was once the home of a Athena Lemnia statue (which was damaged in 1997) which is now located in a high alcove in the Rhys Carpenter Art and Archaeology Library. A papier-mâché cast of that Athena now stands in her stead at the Great Hall.[5]
The library encloses a large open courtyard called "The Cloisters", which is the site of the College's traditional Lantern Night ceremony. The cremated remains of M. Carey Thomas and Emmy Noether are in the courtyard cloister. According to her 1985 graduation address, alumna Katharine Hepburn used to go skinny dipping in the Cloisters fountain. A popular tradition is for undergraduates to skinny dip before graduating and conveniently the fountain contains chlorinated water.
The building was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1991.[2][6]
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