Alumni Hall (University of Notre Dame)

Alumni Hall is one of the 32 Residence Halls on the campus of the University of Notre Dame and one of the 16 male dorms. It is located on South Quad adjacent to "Main Circle", across from the law school building. Because of Alumni's central location and boisterous reputation, residents fondly refer to the hall as the "Center of the Universe". Together with other historic structures of the university, it is on the National Register of Historic Places.[2][3]

Alumni Hall
Residence Hall
University of Notre Dame
Arms: Vert two chevronels argent between three dog or
Campus quadSouth
Established1931
Named forNotre Dame Alumni
ArchitectMaginnis & Walsh
Architectural styleCollegiate Gothic
ColorsGreen and white    
GenderMale
RectorJay Verzosa
Undergraduates234
Postgraduates2 (serving as Assistant Rectors)
ChapelSt. Charles Borromeo
MascotDawgs
Interhall sportsBaseball, basketball, football, hockey, soccer, lacrosse, bowling, volleyball
CharitiesMartin Hall - Notre Dame College in Bangladesh
Major eventsWake Week, Alumni/Dillon Rivalry Week, Dawgtoberfest, Rally in the Alley, Catalino Wine Mixer, Challoween, Matt Brach Bash, 1SA Locker Box, Quad Dancing
Websitehttps://alumnihall.nd.edu
Alumni Hall
LocationNotre Dame, Indiana
Coordinates41°41′58″N 86°14′21″W
Built1931 [1]
ArchitectMaginnis and Walsh [1]
Architectural styleCollegiate Gothic
Part ofUniversity of Notre Dame: Main and South Quadrangles (ID78000053)
Added to NRHPMay 23, 1978

History

Alumni and Dillon Hall were built as part of an extensive building program that started in the mid 20s and aimed at improving educational and living facilities, and increasing supply of on-campus residential facilities.[4] The two dorms were expected to cost $850,000 and add host 500 students to reduce the housing shortage and increase on-campus students to 2,600. Ground was broken on March 2nd 1931 and construction was contracted to Sollitt and Sons.[5] Funds were collected through the Alumni Association and a $250,000 gift from the General Education Board.[6] An additional $52,000 came from the 1925 Rose Bowl.[7]

Both halls were designed in 1931 by architects Charles Donagh Maginnis and Timothy Walsh in Collegiate Gothic style. The Maginnis & Walsh was known at the time for its innovative and refined gothic design of churches and campuses in Boston, and was behind the campus architecture of Boston College and the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.[8] The architectural style of both Dillon and Alumni was in line with the previous gothic building on campus by Kervick and Fagan such as Morrissey, with local yellow brick with limestone trimmings, adorned with stone carvings on the facade and the interiors. The exterior features carvings of saints and athletes. The hall's unique architecture includes gargoyles up top and stone carvings of everything from Madonna and Child (north side chapel entrance), saints (Sts. Thomas Aquinas and Bonaventure in the courtyard), dogs (Clashmore Mike, one of the original mascots of the football team), to Knute Rockne (east side). On the south side of the building, facing South Bend, is a statue by Hungarian artist Eugene Kormendi of a college graduate known as The Graduate or Joe College who is looking towards leaving college for the real world.[9] The hall's chapel is dedicated to St. Charles Borromeo, the patron saint of then-president Fr. Charles L. O'Donnell, CSC.[10] The ornate halls made up then the southern edge and entrance of campus.[11]

Built at a total cost of $375,000, Alumni Hall has 169 single rooms and 20 doubles, in addition to those of the rector and the prefects.[12] The first rector was Rev. Raymond Clancy, C.S.C. When the halls opened in late October of 1931 and two hundred students (who had resided off campus for the beginning of the academic year) moved in, Alumni featured some of the latest technologies of the time, such as electric elevators, extension phones, buzzers, and slots for used razors.[13] Since previous newest residential development of Howard Hall, Morrissey Hall, and Lyons Hall (built in 1924-1927) had previously been known as "Gold Coast" because of their refined architecture, Alumni and Dillon quickly were dubbed "Platinum Coast" both because they had improved amenities but also because of the grayer color of the architecture and decoration.[14][15][16]

The hall was so named in honor of the University's alumni. Initially, a funding drive for a new hall was initiated by the Alumni Association in 1915 for the construction of a hall to be names 'Old Students' Hall' and serve as residence hall and to host alumni returning to campus.[17] This fund was instead first invested in Liberty Bonds in 1917, and then again loaned to the University for other projects. When the project was revived in 1920, issues with the building field prevented construction. Again, in 1922 funds were collected but instead of initiating construction, the Alumni Associated gave more than $60,000 to the University to complete the fund to secure funds from the General Education Board. To honor this continued support of the Alumni Association, the University decided to name the hall 'Alumni Hall' in 1931.[18] The name was chosen as a better sounding version of 'Old Students' Hall'. Additionally, given the shortage of student housing on-campus, the plan to have rooms dedicating to returning alumni was scrapped.[19] The Coat of Arms features two white chevronels on a green field, the colors of the hall, and three dogs, the mascot of the hall.

Alumni Hall in the winter

During World War II, Dillon and Alumni officers for the V-12 Navy College Training Program.[20] In the 1940s, when Navy trainees took over the residence, Alumni's residents squeezed in with one another, turning all singles into doubles. The space was so cramped that Dave Condon '49, later a sportswriter for the Chicago Tribune, wrote in Scholastic that "when someone entered by the front door, it necessitated someone else leaving by the rear egress."[21]

Traditions

The mascot of alumni hall is the Dawg, in honor of Clashmore Mike, the original Notre Dame mascot donated by Knute Rockne that was subsequently replaced by the Leprechaun. Alumni's close-knit community and tradition for rambunctious behavior likens them to a traditional fraternity; so much so that the dorm is represented by and displays Greek letters. These letters are Delta-Omega-Gamma, which spells out the name of the alumni mascot, a dog (the only time it is not spelled out as "Dawg"). They display their letters three times a year: during Freshman Orientation (Frosh-O), during Alumni-Dillon Rivalry Week, and during Alumni's secretive Wake Week (shrouded in mystery) in the spring.[22]

The Alumni Wake, started in 1983, was inspired by traditional Irish wakes with late night partying. The first Wake involved a handmade wooden coffin, flowers raided from a cemetery trash heap, and a procession. It was intended to be a fancy event, with decorations that turned sections of the dorm into Dublin streets. In subsequent years the Wake became a rowdy and alcohol-infused celebration surrounded by bizarre traditions, one of which involved Rector George Rozum, CSC, ‘61, ’80MSA, being carried into the hall's dance inside a coffin. The Wake was traditionally held in the basement of Alumni Hall, but with stricter rules from the administration the Wake was moved to other locations around campus. From the original Irish Wake sprang the Wake Week of today, a week shrouded in celebration and mystery. Though the administration has cracked down on the celebration, the Wake retains much of its original spirit and mystery.

Entrance to the Chapel of St Charles Borromeo

Alumni Hall has a long-lasting rivalry with Dillon Hall, with which it shares a courtyard. Though Dillon contains a larger number of inhabitants, Alumni residents refer to Dillon as the "little brother". In the 1970s and ‘80s, residents were engaged in the "Window Wars" by throwing and hitting golf balls from the courtyard at Dillon's windows at 3 in the morning after Dillon initiated the conflict.

On Fridays of home football weekends, Alumni puts on an activity known as "quad dancing". At exactly 12:31 p.m., residents charge out of the south quad doors dressed in bizarre costumes. They proceed to dance rambunctiously on South Quad for slightly less than ten minutes, then return inside and continue on with the day.

Notable residents

References

  1. "Official Building Inventory" (PDF). Facilities Design and Operations. University of Notre Dame. 1 October 2015. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 11 November 2015.
  2. "Welcome to SHAARD". secure.in.gov. Retrieved 13 May 2017.
  3. "National Register of Historic Places Inventory -- Nomination Form" (PDF). United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service. Retrieved 2017-05-16.
  4. "University breaks ground for $850,00 dormitories" (PDF). The Notre Dame alumnus. 9 (7): 240.
  5. "University breaks ground for $850,00 dormitories" (PDF). The Notre Dame alumnus. 9 (7): 240.
  6. "University breaks ground for $850,00 dormitories" (PDF). The Notre Dame alumnus. 9 (7): 240.
  7. Dufresne, Chris "When they were riding high". Los Angeles Times, October 2, 2007
  8. "Maginnis & Walsh | Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Canada". dictionaryofarchitectsincanada.org. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  9. Archives, Notre Dame (17 June 2011). "Campus Statue Project". Notre Dame Archives News & Notes. Retrieved 5 November 2019.
  10. "Alumni Hall // Campus Tour // University of Notre Dame". Tour.nd.edu. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  11. The Notre Dame Alumnus (PDF). 10 (2): 35 http://www.archives.nd.edu/Alumnus/VOL_0010/VOL_0010_ISSUE_0002.pdf. Retrieved 4 June 2020. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  12. The Notre Dame Alumnus (PDF). 10 (2): 35 http://www.archives.nd.edu/Alumnus/VOL_0010/VOL_0010_ISSUE_0002.pdf. Retrieved 4 June 2020. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  13. "Alumni and Dillon Halls Opened to Students" (PDF). Notre Dame Alumnus. 10 (2). November 1931. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  14. "Know Thy Notre Dame" (PDF). Scholastic. 86 (9): 10. January 25, 1946. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  15. Scholastic (PDF). 66 (4). October 14, 1932 http://archives.nd.edu/Scholastic/VOL_0066/VOL_0066_ISSUE_0004.pdf. Retrieved 6 June 2020. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  16. "ND Expansion: and still it grows" (PDF). Scholastic. 97 (11). January 13, 1956. Retrieved 6 June 2020.
  17. "Alumni Hal Is The Name of New Dormitory" (PDF). The Notre Dame Alumnus. 9 (8). April 1931.
  18. "Progress" (PDF). The Notre Dame Alumnus. 9 (10): 364. June 1932.
  19. "Alumni Hal Is The Name of New Dormitory" (PDF). The Notre Dame Alumnus. 9 (8). April 1931.
  20. "Directory of Students 1943-1944" (PDF). Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  21. "The Notre Dame Scholastic, Vol. 75, No. 19" (PDF). nd.edu. March 27, 1942. Retrieved 2017-05-16.
  22. ENR/PAZ // University Communications: Web // University of Notre Dame. "Hall Portrait: Alumni // News // Notre Dame Magazine // University of Notre Dame". Magazine.nd.edu. Retrieved 2015-12-23.
  23. "Notre Dame Directory" (PDF). Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  24. "Notre Dame Directory" (PDF). Retrieved 31 January 2019.
  25. "Notre Dame Directory 1958-1959" (PDF). Retrieved 31 January 2019.
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