Lycoming College - Lycoming College Campus - Past and Present

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  • Subject = Doors and doorways
  • Date = 1962

About This Collection

The Lycoming College Campus - Past and Present collection is an exhibit of photographs depicting the buildings and grounds of the campus from its earliest days as the Williamsport Academy to the present Lycoming College campus. An effort has been made to show the transformation of the campus through the years, respecting the legacies of the past and acknowledging the changes that the future requires. This collection also honors the individuals from whom several of the buildings were named, by displaying their photographs, if possible, and short summaries of their significance in the lives of their families, their communities, and the college.

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Doors and doorways, Dormitories, Fences, Pediments, Asbury Hall (1962)
View of the front of Asbury Hall from the iron fencing between Wesley Hall and John W. Long Library. Asbury, an H-shaped building on Franklin Street, was built in 1962 to house 154 male students, plus a resident advisor, or in the absence of a resident advisor, for chapel speakers and other guests of the college. In 1968, it was made a male, freshmen residence hall, with a dean available on the first floor. Due to an overflow of women students in 1971, a section of the building was used for housing women, although the building was not co-ed. Asbury Hall was named in honor of Bishop Francis Asbury, the father of The United Methodist Church in America. He was a bishop in the Susquehanna Valley in 1912, when the Williamsport Academy, the institution from which Lycoming College got its roots, was formed.
Doors and doorways, Dormitories, Lampposts, Pediments, Stairways, Asbury Hall (1962)
View of the back of Asbury Hall on the Lycoming College campus. Asbury, an H-shaped building on Franklin Street, was built in 1962 to house 154 male students, plus a resident advisor, or in the absence of a resident advisor, for chapel speakers and other guests of the college. In 1968, it was made a male, freshmen residence hall, with a dean available on the first floor. Due to an overflow of women students in 1971, a section of the building was used for housing women, although the building was not co-ed. Asbury Hall was named in honor of Bishop Francis Asbury, the father of The United Methodist Church in America. He was a bishop in the Susquehanna Valley in 1912, when the Williamsport Academy, the institution from which Lycoming College got its roots, was formed.
Arches, Doors and doorways, Dormitories, Patios, Stairways, East Hall (1962)
View of East Hall Fraternity Residence. The residence is divided into five sections, each housing one of the national fraternities on campus. The ground floor is a large social area, shared by the Greek organizations. Each unit has rooms for twenty-four residents, a lounge, and chapter room. The exterior is Georgian Colonial design. Entrances to fraternity units are from archways located in the front and back of the building.
Automobiles, Doors and doorways, Hand railings, Household moving, Pediments, Trailers, Students, Windows, Women, Crever Hall (1962)
Automobiles and a covered trailer line the street outside of Crever Hall as students move into the residence hall. Two females carrying books walk along the street, another leans against a railing, another sits on the stairs, and another is coming outside through the door.