Voorhees Mall is a large grassy area with stately shade trees on a block (sometimes known as "Voorhees Campus") of about 28 acres (0.11 km) located on the College Avenue Campus of Rutgers University near downtown New Brunswick , New Jersey . An eclectic mix of architectural styles, Voorhees Mall is lined by many historic academic buildings. The block is bound by Hamilton Street (to the east), George Street (north), College Avenue (south) and Seminary Place (west). At the mall's western end, across Seminary Place, is the campus of the New Brunswick Theological Seminary , whose history is intertwined with the early history of Rutgers University. Across Hamilton Street is the block called Old Queens , the seat of the university.
23-432: The mall bisecting the block was formed when Bleecker Place, a city street, was closed. After several generous donations to Rutgers, including the first building dedicated to housing the institution's library (now known as Voorhees Hall), the grassy mall was named for Ralph and Elizabeth Rodman Voorhees. Voorhees Mall was once the site of annual commencement exercises for Rutgers College. Professor George H. Cook (for whom
46-547: A Bachelor of Arts (A.B.) in 1932. Ballantine Hall was mostly destroyed by fire in the 1930s. The rear of the building remained standing, and when the College Avenue Gymnasium was built a few blocks away, Ballantine Hall was used for classroom space. The Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum expanded over the remains of the Ballantine Gym, and the intact tiled pool is today used for storage. Parts of
69-605: A portion of the New Brunswick Theological Seminary campus. The land for the building was acquired as part of a deal between Rutgers and the Seminary, in which Rutgers took over most of Holy Hill (upon which the former Seminary campus was built) in exchange for constructing a new Seminary campus. Each building contains classrooms, lecture halls, and study spaces, with the northern building housing some Rutgers academic departments. The Honors College
92-802: A statue of Prince William the Silent (1533–1584) of the House of Nassau and later Prince of Orange , who was the leader of the Dutch rebellion against the Spanish that set off the Eighty Years' War and resulted in the formal independence of the United Provinces in 1648. Turck, of Dutch extraction, intended to give the statue to the University to signify the institution's Dutch roots. He kept
115-505: Is a modern structure built in 1963. It is used as one of the campus's major classroom buildings, along with Murray Hall, Hardenbergh Hall, Frelinghuysen Hall, and Campbell Hall. The building's large auditorium classrooms are often used for movies, plays, and other gatherings as well as classes. Fenton B. Turck, a New York physician and biologist, with the assistance of railroad magnate, and longtime Rutgers alumnus and trustee, Leonor F. Loree (Rutgers College Class of 1877), anonymously donated
138-541: Is an old tunnel, dug in the 18th century to mine copper. The tunnel stretches from Mine Street, a few blocks down College Avenue and supposedly was used to help runaway slaves as part of the Underground Railroad and to smuggle alcohol during Prohibition . Ford Hall was most recently used a graduate student dormitory , but is currently closed and being converted to offices for the School of Arts and Sciences. It
161-599: Is named for John U. Ford, a trustee of the university and former entrepreneur in the rubber industry. The building was designed by architect Bertram Goodhue, also known for Gothic revival churches, the Los Angeles Public Library, and the Nebraska state capitol building. Named for Austin Scott (1848–1922), the tenth President of Rutgers University and a history and political science professor, Scott Hall
184-853: The Rutgers School of Social Work , however, previously it was home to Campus Information Services, the Raritan Club, the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity, the Partisan Review , a female graduate student residence, the Rutgers Religious Ministry and the Office of Career Services. New Jersey Hall was built from funds authorized by the New Jersey state legislature to construct an "Agricultural Hall" to house
207-465: The Cook campus of Rutgers University was named) erected this Italianate-Victorian brownstone which he named Riverstede as his home in 1868. It later was the home of William Henry Steele Demarest (1863–1956), eleventh President of Rutgers University (from 1906 to 1924), during his tenure as President of the New Brunswick Theological Seminary from 1924 to 1934. Today, Riverstede houses various offices for
230-612: The Engineering Building was constructed. Van Dyck Hall was built in 1928 and named after the first dean of Rutgers College, Francis C Van Dyck. Originally, it was part of the Rutgers Scientific School and housed the Physics department. Today, Van Dyck Hall houses classrooms and the university's Department of History. Ford Hall was the second dormitory on campus, built in 1915. Underneath the dorm
253-538: The School of Engineering) has since relocated to Busch Campus in Piscataway. Originally called the Chemistry Building, Milledoler Hall is named for Reverend Philip Milledoler (1775–1852), professor of didactic theology in the New Brunswick Theological Seminary , trustee of Queen's College , and fifth President of Rutgers College from 1825 to 1840. Rev. Milledoler was also the person who suggested
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#1732791955564276-638: The State Experiment Station (now part of the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, formerly Cook College ). It initially housed the college's departments of Chemistry and Biology. Today, New Jersey Hall houses the university's Department of Economics and the New Jersey Bureau of Economic Research. It is primarily an office building. Recent efforts have been made to rename New Jersey Hall in honor of Nobel laureate Milton Friedman who graduated from Rutgers College with
299-461: The building are fabricated entirely of ceramic materials donated by the ceramics industry of New Jersey. The third floor classroom has a beautifully enormous gas-fired fireplace which was state of the art when constructed. The floor of the room consists entirely of hand-laid artistic tile, including an unusual feature, a pre-Nazi use of a then-innocuous pattern now known as the swastika. The Ceramic Engineering Department moved to Busch Campus in 1963 when
322-591: The name of the college be changed from Queen's College to Rutgers College in 1825. He wanted to honor Colonel Henry Rutgers, a Revolutionary War hero and a member of his congregation. Currently, this building houses several administrative offices for Rutgers College , including the Office of the Dean, as well as one lecture hall. The Graduate School of Education was originally part of the Graduate School-New Brunswick , founded in 1876 and one of
345-794: The old Ballantine facade can be seen in the parking lot behind the art museum and in the George Street entrance. [1] Originally built to house the Rutgers College library, this building is named for Ralph and Elizabeth Rodman Voorhees. The main library was later moved to the Archibald S. Alexander Library . Voorhees Hall later hosted the University Art Gallery which became the Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum in 1983. Today it houses
368-565: The oldest graduate schools in the country. The GSE separated from the Graduate School in 1923 and its present building was constructed in 1961. Supported by stilts at its southern end, the Graduate School of Education is built in the Frank Lloyd Wright-inspired Cantilever style of architecture. The Academic Buildings were constructed at the eastern end of Voorhees Mall in the mid-2010s, replacing
391-730: The state geologist of New Jersey . He had become a vice president of Rutgers College and was a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science . He died on September 22, 1889, in New Brunswick, New Jersey . Cook College at Rutgers University was named after him, as is the George Hammell Cook Distinguished Alumni Award. Rutgers College Too Many Requests If you report this error to
414-615: The statue in the basement of his laboratory in Manhattan for eight years before it was unveiled on the present Voorhees Mall on 9 June 1928. This statue is the only replica of the Lodewyck Rowyer original that stands in The Hague . 40°30′02″N 74°26′50″W / 40.5005°N 74.4471°W / 40.5005; -74.4471 George Hammell Cook George Hammell Cook (January 5, 1818 – September 22, 1889)
437-555: The university's Department of Art History and the Art History Library which was expanded into an addition to Voorhees Hall in 2002. Originally built to house the College of Engineering , Murray Hall was designed by alumnus Douwe D. Williamson (Rutgers College Class of 1870) and Frederick P. Hill (Rutgers College Class of 1883). Built partly with a gift from steel magnate and industrialist Andrew Carnegie , Murray Hall
460-408: Was appointed professor of chemistry . His teaching duties also included mathematics and theology. Among his first research projects was the chemical analysis of marl . This research led him to determine better places to mine marl, which led to his appointment as the assistant state geologist. He published a geological survey of New Jersey to replace the one made in 1840. In 1864 he was appointed as
483-685: Was constructed in the mid-2010s alongside the Academic Buildings. The building, a mixture of seminar-style classrooms, lounges, and four floors of traditional student dorm rooms, opened in Fall 2015 alongside the launch of the Honors College program. The Rutgers School of Social Work was built as the home of the School of Ceramics (now the Department of Materials Science and Engineering) in 1922. The structural and design elements of
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#1732791955564506-545: Was named for David Murray, professor of mathematics and astronomy at Rutgers College and college trustee. Murray assisted George Cook in establishing the Rutgers Scientific School (now part of Cook College ) and in getting Rutgers named a land-grant college under the Morrill Act of 1862. Today, Murray Hall houses classrooms and the university's Department of English and Writing Program; the College of Engineering (now named
529-567: Was the state geologist of New Jersey and vice president of Rutgers College . His geological survey of New Jersey became the predecessor for the U.S. Geological Survey . He was born in Hanover Township, New Jersey , on January 5, 1818, to John Cook and Sarah Munn. He married Mary Halsey Thomas on March 23, 1846. He served as the principal of The Albany Academy in Albany, New York from 1850 to 1852. He came to Rutgers in 1853 and
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