Culler Hall (Miami University)
Culler Hall | |
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Front of Culler Hall | |
Location within Ohio | |
General information | |
Type | Academic Building |
Architectural style | Neoclassical Revival |
Location | Oxford, Ohio |
Country | United States |
Coordinates | 39°30′27.57″N 84°43′56.94″W / 39.5076583°N 84.7324833°W |
Current tenants | Physics, Mathematics, and Aeronautics Departments |
Construction started | 1959 |
Cost | $1,304,000 US |
Client | Miami University |
Owner | Miami University |
Dimensions | |
Other dimensions | 939,521 cubic ft |
Technical details | |
Structural system | U-shaped |
Floor count | 2 (and a basement) |
Floor area | 56,070 sq ft |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Cellarius and Hilmer |
Main contractor | Frank Messer & Sons |
Culler Hall is a classroom building at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio. Its construction was completed in 1961. With the dedication of Culler Hall on Sunday, January 29, 1961, John B. Whitlock (Chairman of Building and Grounds Committee for the Board of Trustees) presented Culler Hall as a new building with classrooms and laboratories dedicated to the study of Mathematics, Physics, and Aeronautics.[1] Built from 1959 to 1961, Culler Hall construction warranted the cutting down of around 60 trees (many of which were very old and found to be dying from within upon removal). The clearing of these trees led to the creation of the protected Bishop Woods.[2] In October 1957, then President of Miami University, Dr. John D. Millett, contacted architects from Cellarius and Hilmer Architects to estimate the cost of adding air-conditioning into Culler Hall during its creation. This warranted 8 inches more for each floor, creating a necessary amount of about $43,000 more for the project.[3] The center of the U-shaped structure has an impressive glass front entrance showing off the Foucault Pendulum within. More information about this pendulum can be found below.[4]
Culler Hall has and will remain harboring the same sciences until its inclusion into the Armstrong Student Center within Phase 2 of construction.[5]
Joseph Albertus Culler
Culler Hall was named after the first Professor of Physics in the history of Miami University, Dr. Joseph Albertus Culler. Dr. Culler taught physics at Miami University from 1903-27.[6] An oval plaque in front of Culler Hall's main doors honors Joseph A. Culler. The plaque was fashioned in the same manner as the one for another, Miami University academic building, Harrison Hall, which was built one year earlier.[7]
Personal life
Dr. Culler was born on a farm in Wayne County, Ohio, on March 5, 1858 to Michael and Barbara Culler. In 1887 he married Isabella Carnes. He lived in Oxford, OH, from 1903 until his death in 1937. He was a Presbyterian and a Republican.[8]
Career
He received his A.B. degree from Wooster University in 1884, later returning to Wooster to receive his A.M. and Ph. D. in 1890. Culler worked as a high school principal in Cambridge, Ohio from 1884-85 before transferring to Kenton, Ohio from 1885-1900. Dr. Culler became superintendent of schools in Kenton, Ohio, from 1900-1902, and in Bowling Green, Ohio, from 1902-1903. In 1903 he joined the faculty at Miami University. Dr. Culler was the first person to hold a Miami professorship in physics after it became distinct from the other sciences in the curriculum.[8]
Dr. Culler was also the author of several books including: 1st, 2nd, and 3rd editions of Book of Physiology (1904), First Book in Physics (1905), High School Book of Physics (1906), General Physics for Colleges, Mechanics and Heat (1909), Electricity, Electromagnetic Waves and Sounds (1913), and Physics for College Freshman (1922). Culler is noted for his passion and research into radio and radium, publishing and conducting several experiments on the matter.[6]
Culler died on May 18, 1937 from cumulative radium burns sustained during his extensive research of radium conducted both before and after his retirement from Miami University. The cause of his death led many to consider him as a “martyr to his science.”[6]
Notable Features of Culler Hall
Culler Hall's Foucault Pendulum
Culler Hall showcases a Foucault pendulum similar to those in the United Nations’ building and the Smithsonian Institution. The solid iron ball (with an electroplated gold surface) is known as the bob of the pendulum. Hanging at the end of the rigid, 43 foot aircraft control cable, the ball is ten inches in diameter and weighs a shocking 160 pounds. The sunburst pattern depicted on the floor helps one notice the minute counter-clockwise rotation of the pendulum as the earth rotates daily.[9]
Culler Hall's Rooftop Astronomical Observatory
On February 13, 1998, the Miami University Remote Astronomy Laboratory (MURAL) found a home on the newly renovated rooftop of Culler Hall. The Laboratory includes an observatory dome. A $15,000 US gift from two Miami Alums Carol and Hall Crannell combined with a $14,000 US grant from the 1996 Learning Technologies Enrichment Program funded the construction of this observatory. Professors from the Physics department (Stephan Alexander, Paul DeVries, and Douglas Marcum) set up the observatory with assistance from Miami students from Astronomy Club.[10]
Future of Culler Hall
With the creation of the Armstrong Student Center, Culler Hall will be renovated and included into this new project. As part of Phase 2 of the student center’s construction, the Physics Department will move into the newly renovated Kreger Hall. Renovation of Culler Hall is the last step in the process of fusing the current Rowan Hall, Gaskill Hall, and Culler Hall into the Armstrong Student Center after it was decided that the Shriver Center, the current student center built 50 years ago when the student population of Miami University was about a third of its current size, had become too small to accomplish all of the universities hopes for a student center functionality.[5]
References
- ↑ Miami University (29 January 1961). Twelfth Mid-Year Commencement Exercises of Miami University and the Dedication of Culler Hall. Miami Archives. Withrow Court: Miami University.
- ↑ Miami University, Clear Ground for M-A-P Unit, Miami Archives, pp. Withrow Court
- ↑ Cellarius, Charles F. (19 October 1957), "Email to Dr. John D. Millett, President of Miami University.", Cellarius & Hilmer
- ↑ Williams, Judy (2008-07-30), "Culler Hall", Ohio Historic Preservation Office, Ohio Historic Inventory (BUT-02529-01)
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Miami University, For Love and Honor, Armstrong Student Center, retrieved 1 November 2011
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Miami University, "Culler Hall", Culler Hall Building Specifications, Miami Archives: Withrow Court
- ↑ Miami University, "Culler Hall", [Order placed for plaque dedicating the building to Joseph A. Culler], Miami Archives: Withrow Court
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Who Was Who in America, 1897-1942, Joseph Albertus Culler (Biography), Miami Archives, pp. Withrow Court
- ↑ Hays, Mary (3 February 1970), "Building Moves with Earth: Culler Pendulum’s Path Unchanged.", Miami Student
- ↑ "Astronomical Observatory tops Culler Hall.", Miami Report, 26 February 1998
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