Oberlin College Archives

OBERLIN COLLEGE ARCHIVES

Ladies Hall (2nd)

Ladies_Hall_2nd_ca1870s_thumb.jpg

Date

1865-1886

Location

Site of Talcott Hall, southwest corner of Professor and College Streets (demolished)

Architects/Collaborators

Simeon C. Porter (1807-1871), Cleveland, OH (architect)

Style

Italianate

History

The foundations for the Second Ladies Hall were laid in the spring of 1861, at the breaking out of the Civil War. Work upon the building proceeded slowly. The walls were put up and the building enclosed in 1863. At the Commencement exercises in 1865 the alumni dinner was there served, and it was regularly opened that fall. It was a brick building, three stories in height, located at the southwest corner of Professor and College streets, on the site now occupied by Talcott Hall. The first floor contained parlors, offices, a society room for the women’s literary societies, an assembly room, a reading room, a dining room, and Stewards’ quarters. The second and third floors contained dormitory rooms for one hundred young women. An equal number of young men were accommodated for board. In 1881 a two-story brick addition was built to the western portion of the hall toward the south, and the first floor of the addition was used as a gymnasium for young women, while the second provided additional rooms for dormitory purposes. It was destroyed by fire on January 9, 1886.

Source

Oberlin College Archives, Office of the Secretary Records.

Historical Map




Image Description

A railed rooftop platform, often found in Italianate architecture, is captured in this photograph, which includes persons stationed there.

Black and white mounted albumen print, 6.75 x 8.75 in., ca. late 1860s
(© Oberlin College Archives, RG 32/4)