Administration Building Holladay Hall North Carolina State College illustrated postcard

Holladay Hall, NC State University (Raleigh, N.C.)
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Item information

Title:
Administration Building Holladay Hall North Carolina State College illustrated postcard
Description:
Transcribed from Postcard: "Built in 1889 and named for Alexander Charles Holladay, first President of the College. Until 1896 the college consisted of this one building. At that time N.C. State University was known as North Carolina College of Agricultural and Mechanical Arts, and was the first functioning land-grant college in the state."
Topics:
Campus and Town
University History
Subjects:
Administration buildings
Original Format:
Postcard, black and white
Extent:
3 x 5 inches
Item identifier:
0019333
Illustrator:
Hilltop Studio more info on Hilltop Studio 
Copyright Date:
Names:
North Carolina State University -- Buildings more info on North Carolina State University -- Buildings 
North Carolina State College more info on North Carolina State College 
North Carolina State University -- History more info on North Carolina State University -- History 
Location:
Raleigh (N.C.)
Digital Project:
University Archives Photographs

Building: North Carolina State University, Alexander Quarles Holladay Hall (Raleigh, Wake County, North Carolina)

Architect:
more info on Upjohn, Hobart Brown, 1876-1949 
Architect:
more info on Carson, Charles L., 1847-1891 
Built:
Street:
1005 Capability Drive
Community:
NC State University
State:
NC
Zip:
27606
Historical note:
Holladay Hall was the first building on campus and, for years, contained virtually the entire college. Prisoners of the state penitentiary built what was then called "Main Building" with bricks donated by the prison. Though it had no electricity or running water, the basement contained laboratories, a kitchen, a dining hall, and a rarity for that era--a gymnasium. Offices, classrooms, and a library of books donated by professors were located on the first floor. A total of 72 students lived on the second and third floors, paying a tuition of $130 per year, which could be reduced for students who swept floors, made fires, and waited tables at seven cents an hour. The building, of Romanesque revival design and with an exceptionally beautiful hallway, has been designated as a historic site by the City Council of Raleigh.
Provenance note:
In 1915, the building was named Holladay Hall in honor of Alexander Quarles Holladay, NC State's first president. Holladay originally applied to NC State (then called the North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts) as an English professor, but was offered the presidency instead. He had studied languages, moral philosophy and law at the University of Virginia and the University of Berlin before fighting in the Civil War as an aid to General Bragg. Holladay was president of the Stonewall Jackson Institute as well as the Florida State Agricultural College at Lake City before he served NC State from 1889-1899.
Location:
Raleigh (N.C.)
Subjects:
College buildings
Historic buildings
Latitude, Longitude:
35.7855, -78.664001