Tag Archives: Faculty Club

Seven Oaks opens in its East Lake Road location (p. 323)

East and West Halls, had been completely renovated in 1954.) The library, designated the Everett Needham Case Library in 1962, was dedicated in 1959. As far back as 1931, Charles W. Spencer had stressed the need for a new building but it was his successor, Thomas M. Iiams, who was to have a major role in planning the structure and to see it take shape. The architect was Robert B. O’Connor (D.F.A., ’59) of O’Connor and Kilham. Chapel House, an anonymous gift, was designed by Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill and completed in 1959. It has a chapel for meditation and prayer, a library, a music room, and facilities for a small number of interfaith resident guests. The Athletic Center, honoring William A. Reid, ’18, Director of the Division of Physical Education and Ath1etics (1935-1955), was opened in 1959, also; its architect was Oscar F. Wiggins, ’22. Watson House, a home for the President, given by Mrs. Thomas J. Watson, Sr., in honor of her late husband, was ready for occupancy at the time of Mr. Case’s retirement in 1962. Arthur A. Meggett, ’36, designed the building; its completion made the president’s former residence, Merrill House, available for the Faculty Club.

Two other facilities should be mentioned. The first, the Colgate Camp on Upper Saranac Lake, was the gift of S. Bayard Colgate (LL.D., 1958), a Trustee, and his family in 1953. It is well suited for use of the Outing Club and for faculty conferences and summer recreation. The second is the new Seven Oaks golf course in the valley east of the campus and the village which was opened in 1958 to supersede the old course behind the dormitories.

As early as 1941 the American Association of University Professors Chapter began a survey of the curriculum and University organization. In the spring of 1943, at Mr. Case’s suggestion, a committee on the Post-War College was established from the faculty with the President as Chairman, to continue the study with particular reference to the needs of a world at peace. Its far-ranging report received searching faculty analysis and was adopted, part by part, from 1945 to 1947.

Central to the program was the general education Core Curriculum, made up of a series of courses prescribed for all students. This concept was an outgrowth of experience with the five one-semester survey courses in the Biological Science, Physical Sciences, Social Sciences, Philosophy and Religion for freshmen and a course in Fine Arts for sophomores, which were an important feature of the “Colgate Plan of

p. 299 – The Cutten Period, 1922-1942

comparison with that in eastern colleges, ranged from $1,500 for instructors to $4,000 for professors; by 1942 it had increased to $5,000 for professors and to $1,800 for instructors. As already noted, however, there were no reductions in salaries because of the depression. In 1924 the University instituted a faculty pension system for the two upper ranks by contract with the Teachers’ Insurance and Annuity Association of America, which in later stages was extended to include assistant professors and instructors, administrative staff members and non-professional employees. Faculty investigations chiefly by Professor Shortliffe, led the Trustees in 1931 to establish a group insurance plan through the Connecticut General Life Insurance Company, which embraced the teaching staff and certain others. When Taylor Hall was no longer needed for student use after the Student Union became available in 1937, the faculty took it over for the newly organized Faculty Club which was to fulfill a long-felt need for promoting informal contacts and recreational activities. Ten years earlier their wives, with Mrs. Cutten as prime mover, had formed the Woman’s

SENIOR FACULTY, 1933 1st row: Stewart, Moore, McGregory, Crawshaw, Huntington, Chester
2nd row: Whitnall, Shepardson, Ewart, E. W. Smith, R. B. Smith, Langworthy, A. W. Smith
SENIOR FACULTY

p. 293 – The Cutten Period, 1922-1942

floors of Eaton Hall became a dormitory and the Departments of Philosophy and Religion and Music were assigned offices and classrooms on the first. The Chemistry Building was converted to the use of the Department of Biology in 1930 when the Department of Chemistry moved into the new McGregory Hall. Spear House after a century as a faculty residence and fraternity house was reconstructed in 1935 for the Samuel Colgate Baptist Historical Collection which was transferred to it from the Library. When space in the new James C. Colgate Student Union Building became available for the campus post office and student organizations in 1937, Taylor Hall which had housed them was remodeled for a faculty club and largely furnished with articles from the James B. Colgate mansion in Yonkers which was being demolished.