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LOCATION
4: EAST SIDE OF VAN VLECK HALL
Van Vleck Hall
| Undoubtedly one of the loveliest
buildings on the campus, it was completed in 1858. The architectural
design is Italianate. The building served the entire needs
of Hope's predecessor, the Holland Academy. Students were housed
here, the classrooms and library were here, and President Philip
Phelps and his family lived here. Fire was a continual problem
when students lived here, since they had stoves in their rooms
for heating. During the renovation of the building in the spring
of 1980, the roof caught fire and the building was almost destroyed.
Fortunately, the building was saved, and it now serves as a
residence for women. A historical marker stands at the northwest
corner of the building. |
(Photos: top - Exterior of Van Vleck,
c. 1900; bottom - President Phelps' study.)
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First Chapel/Gymnasium
| In 1862, the students
and faculty felt such a desperate need for this facility that
they built it themselves! All early pictures of the campus
include this building. It served as a gym until Carnegie Gymnasium
was built in 1906 during the Kollen administration. Just east
of the chapel/gym was Theological Hall. Another early building
in this general area was Charter Hall. |
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Carnegie/Schouten Gymnasium
 |
President Gerrit J. Kollen convinced
Andrew Carnegie that he should make an exception to giving
for libraries only. Carnegie agreed and gave $30,000 for a
new gymnasium. It was dedicated on September 16, 1906. In 1954,
the building was remodeled extensively. The balcony was removed
and the structure was renamed Carnegie/Schouten Gymnasium in
honor of Jack Schouten, who pioneered in the development of
sports at Hope College. The building was razed in July of 1982
to make way for the administrative center addition to the north
side of the DeWitt Center. |
Pine Grove
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This was likely the "College
Grove" where the 25th anniversary of the college was celebrated
in 1890-91. The Pine Grove is loved and revered by Hope students
and faculty, and it is considered the heart of the campus.
The stately pine trees add a special dimension to the beauty
of the campus. On the southeast edge of the Pine Grove stands
the sculpture Icarus by Kurt Laurenz Metzler. It was a gift
of the children of Dr. Clarence De Graaf, in whose memory it
was dedicated in 1989. |
Location 5: College
Avenue at the College Arch
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