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Features
Dartmouth's New North Campus Master Plan (2001) All that Remains of Lewiston, Vermont Charles Alonzo Rich Builds the New Dartmouth, 1893-1914 John Russell Pope's Master Plan for Dartmouth Halls, Tombs and Houses: Student Society Architecture at Dartmouth News
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Criticism
Some Points regarding Berry Library's Design A Plea for the Shower Towers: Preservation of Place in the History of Computing Other
The Buildings and Projects of Lamb & Rich, Architects, and Related Firms, 1876-1935 Request for Information on Fred Wesley Wentworth The Persistence of "Wah-hoo-wah," Dartmouth's "Indian Yell," at the University of Virginia Links Out
Class of '66 webcam on the Inn Proposal for a Heraldic Coat of Arms Eleazar Wheelock's Two Schools Charles N. Haskins and the Woodward Room at Baker Library The Paul Room at Baker Library 1992 Aerial Photograph of Hanover Buzzflood, the student-run news line The uvScene, transforming life in the Upper Valley Architectural criticism by Donald Maurice Kreis Constructive Images, the Trumbull-Nelson newsletter About Dartmo.
[RSS 2.0] This site presents one view of the architecture of Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, U.S.A. The site began with some essays in May 1995 and incorporated the buildings catalog in 1996 and the Rich thesis in June, 1998. (The site was known as DArch initially and was renamed for an abbreviation of the word "Dartmouth.") The campi of Columbia, Stanford and Amherst are the subjects of readily-available books, but no detailed architectural history of the country's fifth-oldest campus has been written. Dartmouth hosts the important collegiate grouping of Dartmouth Row and comprises some of the largest accumulations of the work of three American architects: Ammi Burnham Young, Charles Alonzo Rich and Jens Fredrick Larson. The campus currently is expanding in a fashion that is self-consciously traditional, which only enhances the need for information about its historic buildings. |
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