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By Hannelore Sudermann
During a quiet weekend last July, a crew came to campus to steal away one of the University’s oldest landmarks--the Ferry Hall cupola. The quaint 12-foot by 12-foot Georgian-style structure had already survived more than a century and a major relocation. Now it was on the move again.
A lot of Washington State University’s history is tied up with the architectural element, starting with the original Ferry Hall, the University’s first dormitory, occupying the south end campus. Men and women lived on separate floors there until Stevens Hall, the residence dedicated for women, went up on the opposite end of campus.
By 1900, a new Ferry Hall was built in the same spot. This time, it housed about 100 students on four floors. The structure, designed by G. W. Bullard, was brick and built in the popular college Georgian style. It had many elements typical of the form including columns, dentils, and a four-sided cupola.
For three decades Ferry was the only men’s dorm on campus, housing 180 students and providing a dining room used by residents of Ferry, Stimson, and Waller. WSU’s first fraternity was formed there, starting as a club, and then becoming a “house” when the students moved into a rented home across campus.
In the late 1960s, the university unveiled plans to tear down the Ferry Hall dormitory and build a new science building (Eastlick) in its place. News of the structure’s demise was not well received, particularly among the thousands of alumni who had lived there over the decades.
At this point Quann was working for WSU as the assistant registrar and completing a doctorate degree in education. A group of campus employees, students, and alumni started campaigning to save the structure. It soon became clear that the foundation was about to give way. It would cost more to shore up the building than to tear it down and start over, says Quann. “We knew it couldn’t be saved.”
So someone came up with a plan to rescue the cupola. “We would save the essence of Ferry Hall to appease all those students and alumni who were upset.” The alumni office sold bricks from Ferry Hall to donors, raising money in the name of Ferry Hall for scholarships as well for as the cupola’s 1975 relocation to the mall.
Instead of a perch four stories up, the cupola was placed on the ground in front of Old Science Hall/Murrow Hall (another of Bullard’s designs, built in 1899). It was slated to be an information kiosk. Instead, from its niche amidst the trees, it served as a meeting place, or a spot to sit out of the rain and snow and watch for passing classmates. There was usually a Daily Evergreen waiting on the bench inside.
But new construction in the Murrow Yard this year to provide for more public space and better pedestrian flow didn’t include the cupola. Once again, the structure stood in the way of progress.
A couple of ideas were floated for its relocation. The best notion was to move it near the Lewis Alumni Centre, says Wilcomb, “We can take care of it and make it available for meetings, receptions, or whatever.”
The idea came up at an arboretum committee meeting. Wilcomb was there and eagerly volunteered on behalf of the alumni group. The arboretum itself is a work in progress. Having just broken ground a few years ago, it is now being landscaped with a variety of trees commemorating graduating classes and in memory of alumni and others. There was certainly room for something so tied to alumni and University history like the cupola, says Wilcomb.
Now it has the best of both worlds. It can be viewed from below, as it was designed to be seen when it topped Ferry Hall, and it can be visited up close as it has been for the past three decades.
The two-acre arboretum hillside offers views of campus, the Alumni Centre, and to the south, Observatory Hill. As the landscape around the cupola is planted, “it will be gorgeous by spring,” says Wilcomb.
Keeping it on campus was the right thing to do, says Wilcomb, adding that “we’re certainly happy to give it a home.” It’s fitting that a structure under which thousands of WSU students have lived may be preserved for the enjoyment of thousands more.
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