From Woody's Couch

Our Playbook on OSU History

Category: Campus locations (page 8 of 9)

Spring is in the air: When Chadwick Arboretum comes alive

Chadwick Arboretum lake, 1994

What makes a college campus attractive? One of the key elements is its gardens, and OSU is no exception. The campus has had gardens dating back to the early 1880s, but they’ve never been just for show. The 1883 annual report to the Board of Trustees from the Department of Horticulture reported that:

“Owing to our long continued summer drouth (sic) the plants did not look as well as usual. [However,] By the completion of the Green-house … we will not only add to the attractiveness of the University, but also furnish a valuable means of illustration for the students of this department.”

For many years, the Horticultural Gardens were located behind Townshend Hall, just a stone’s throw from the Ohio Stadium. In April 1980, the Department proposed to establish the Chadwick Arboretum north of the Agriculture Administration building.  The Board of Trustees approved the proposal in July of that year, and a dedication ceremony was held in May 1981. At the time, the Arboretum included several acres of gardens along Lane Avenue, near the Agriculture Administration Building. In 1989 a lake was added, and in 1990, its first director was hired. The arboretum was then expanded to 36 acres, surrounding the OSU sports parks on the west side of the river. In 1995, The Richard and Annette Bloch Cancer Survivors Plaza was added to the Arboretum grounds on the northeast side of Olentangy River Road.

Lewis Chadwick, 1987

The Arboretum was named after Dr. Lewis C. Chadwick, an internationally acclaimed horticulturist, who worked extensively with OSU campus planners in selecting appropriate plants for various campus areas. He was employed for 38 years in Department of Horticulture, retiring in 1967. He kept up his University ties, continuing to work on projects—including the arboretum that now carries his name. Throughout his career at the University, Chadwick attempted to collect or produce landscape plants from around the world, as well as planting many trees across campus. He died in 1993 at the age of 91.

 

 

Filed by C.N.

Kennedy Commons named for first dining halls director

Kennedy, 1940s

For nearly 40 years, June F. Kennedy dedicated her career to food science, particularly the feeding of OSU students. So, it’s only natural that the Board of Trustees named a dining facility after her.

Kennedy, who received a bachelor’s and master’s degree in Food Science and Nutrition from Missouri State University, was hired in 1920 as an assistant professor in the Department of Home Economics. She also was appointed head of the Institution Management and Dietetics program at that time. When Pomerene Hall was built in 1922, it included the Refectory, a campus restaurant also dedicated as a laboratory for institution management students. She took charge of the lab in 1934. She is credited with opening food service facilities to students in Campbell, Brown, Page and Arps Halls.

During World War II she took charge of the South Campus dorms and also coordinated food services for veterans housed in University housing at Port Columbus Airport, helping transport cooks and equipment to the site in the wee hours of early morning.

1959

In 1946, Kennedy was appointed as the University’s first food-services director, not an easy role with the huge enrollment growth after the end of the war. At the same time, until her retirement in 1959, she also taught upper-level courses in institutional management. She died in 1991 at the age of 100.

On April 1, 1983, in recognition of her long years of service, the Board of Trustees renamed the Women’s Commons to the June F. Kennedy Commons. The commons was built in various stages between 1939 and 1940 to serve the women’s dorms of Bradley and Canfield halls. A final addition connected it to Mack Hall.

Kennedy Commons, 1963

 

Recently, the Commons received a Silver rating in the LEED (Leadership in Energy and Kennedy Commons, 1963 Environmental Design) program administered by the U.S. Green Building Council. The 30,000-square-foot dining facility had been closed for a year for renovations, re-opening in the fall of 2011. It is the third building on campus to receive LEED certification; the first was the Ohio 4-H Building and the second was the Ohio Union. Read more about the Kennedy Commons’ LEED certification at http://urds.osu.edu/articles/urds/16.

Spring is in the air: Evolution of the Oval

University Hall, 1897

It may come as a surprise to many, but the Oval was not in the original campus design. It was, as Shakespeare would have put it, a happy accident.  The original campus design was that of an English country manor: University Hall was set on the highest point, and a long curving drive ran diagonally across what is now the Oval towards present-day Page Hall, where the drive met High Street.  It was not until the 1890s – some two decades after the University opened – that the Oval began to take shape.

In 1890 the second chemistry building (the first had burned down, and yes, the second one also would  fall victim to fire) was built on the site of Derby Hall. In 1891 construction began on both Hayes Hall and Orton Hall. The Botany Building already stood on the site of the Faculty Club. So the North and South sides of the Oval were beginning to take shape. It should also be mentioned that several of the faculty members had homes on the grounds, including one that would have stood on the Oval today.

In 1893 the master plan proposed by Captain Herman Haerlin was the first to propose an open space on campus with no roads running through it. However, this space was described as a “quadrangle.” This plan was further aided by the completion of several new buildings: Townshend Hall, Biological Hall (on the site of Hagerty Hall), and the Armory. The roads on the North and South sides of the space were changed to connect all of the buildings, so now there were two roads linking High Street and Neil Avenue in a roughly circular shape.

In 1901 the end of the Oval closest to High Street was reshaped, giving it a more curved appearance, and making the Oval an oval. The diagonal drive that cut across the space was removed in 1912, the same year the Thompson Library was completed.

So, the Oval has changed little since 1901, which largely explains how it got its name. The first reference to “the oval” came in 1910. From 1912-1913 it was usually referred to as “the campus oval.” From 1913 to 1920 it was back to “the oval.” Note that it was not capitalized until 1920.

Oval, 1916

The Oval, prior to the Long Walk, 1913

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In 1914 many of the walks on the Oval were repaved, and it was at that time that the Long Walk was constructed (the “long walk” was first mentioned in 1919 and capitalized, also beginning in 1920). Another major transformation occurred in the 1970s: the roads around the Oval were made pedestrian-only walkways. This explains how you can now walk out the front doors of University, Bricker, Orton, and Hagerty Halls without getting hit by a car.

Filed by C.N.

Older posts Newer posts