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Harvard_Hall Latitude and Longitude:

42°22′29.5″N 71°7′5.5″W / 42.374861°N 71.118194°W / 42.374861; -71.118194
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Harvard Hall, is the fourth oldest building surviving on the original campus after Massachusetts Hall (1720), Holden Chapel (1744), and Hollis Hall (1763)

Harvard Hall is a Harvard University classroom building in Harvard Yard, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

First Harvard Hall

Original Harvard Hall (built in 1674) before it was destroyed by fire in 1764

The present Harvard Hall replaces an earlier structure of the same name on the same site. The first Harvard Hall was built between 1674 and 1677. It was Harvard College's first brick building and replaced a decaying wooden building located a few hundred feet to the southeast. [1] Samuel Andrew, a local Cambridge merchant and shipwright was the master builder. [2]

Present Building

The original Harvard Hall burned on January 24, 1764, destroying 4,500 of the College Library's 5,000 books as well as its collection of "philosophical apparatus" (scientific instruments). The Massachusetts General Court, which had been meeting in Harvard Hall to escape a smallpox epidemic in Boston, took responsibility for the fire and funded reconstruction. Thanks to generous donors such as Thomas Hollis V and John Hancock, within two years the new Harvard Hall housed a library larger than that the college had before the fire. [3] Thomas Dawes, who also built Hollis Hall at Harvard, was the master builder.

Under the specific advice of Benjamin Franklin, a new collection of scientific instruments and electrical demonstration equipment was acquired (mostly in London) to replace the apparatus that had been lost in the fire. The collection he assembled would later become part of the Harvard Collection of Historical Scientific Instruments, now on public display in the Harvard Science Center. [4]

42°22′29.5″N 71°7′5.5″W / 42.374861°N 71.118194°W / 42.374861; -71.118194

References

  1. ^ Stubbs, John Delano Jr. (1992). Underground Harvard: the archaeology of college life (PhD). Harvard University. pp. 59–63.
  2. ^ Bunting, Bainbridge (1985). Harvard - An Architectural History. Cambridge,MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 16–20.
  3. ^ "Featured Item: Records relating to the Harvard Hall fire of 1764 | Harvard Library Portal". Archived from the original on 2015-06-12. Retrieved 2015-06-06.
  4. ^ Tomase, Jennifer (June 1, 2006). "Harvard Gazette: 'A How-To Guide' explores Ben Franklin's 'can-do' legacy". Harvard University Gazette. Retrieved 2016-08-09.