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Gulick Hall Records

 Record Group — Box: 01
Identifier: RG-124

Collection Scope and Contents

This collection documents the planning and construction of Gulick Hall, the first dormitory to be designed with the intent to house both men and woman. The collection includes general information about the dormitory, including a fact sheet which lists the dorms features, number of rooms, floors, space, cost, design, architect information etc.; dedication materials, including memos with the Gulick family; floor plans; construction photographs, and general photograph and slides after the dormitory’s completion. The dedication materials also include the dedication speech given by Dr. Charles F. Weckwerth ’31, dedication invitations, and dedication program.

Dates

  • Creation: 1968-2010

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Unrestricted

Conditions Governing Use

Rights status not fully evaluated.

Read our full copyright statement.

Historical Note

Springfield College students continued to grow in numbers, and by the mid 1960s a need for a new dormitory emerged. Construction on Gulick Hall began the summer of 1968 and was completed in September of 1969.

The dedication was held at the conclusion of the school year on May 29th, 1970. Dr Charles F. Weckwerth, class of 1931, spoke about the man to whom the building bears its name, Dr. Luther Halsey Gulick. Dr. Gulick was often referred to by Dr. Laurence L. Dogget, former President of Springfield College, as “the third founder of the college.” In 1887 he was appointed an instructor and he is generally credited with the development and application of the philosophy of the college: “we’re working for the whole man in body, mind, and spirit.” In 1989, Dr. Gulick wrote: “while we recognize that the intellectual is far more valuable than the physical and that the spiritual is of infinitely more value than both, still we see the fundamental necessity of all three, and work for the development of men as a whole.” Based on his philosophy, Gulick developed the inverted, equilateral triangle which is now the basis of the college’s official seal.

Weckwerth described Gulick as an “individualist who attracted a following of people of free and untrammeled minds…a tireless doer who initially provided a perspective for the early developing philosophy of humanics at Springfield College.” Weckwerth related the saga of Dr. Gulick’s life to a phoenix bird and said that “one can visualize the architect’s artistry as he has captured a symbolic essence in the design motif of Gulick Hall. Weckwerth went on to say, “Surely one sees in this building a 1970s version of a dormitory like phoenix bird lifting upward from the earth its coed students to make Gulick Hall a home during their study and preparation for lives of human service upon graduation.”

Perhaps it is no mistake that Gulick now houses only freshmen students. Today, many first-year students make Gulick Hall their new home, within which they are lifted up within these walls to learn the humanics philosophies of the college.

* Gulick Hall was the first dorm to break the tradition of males and females having completely separate dorm buildings. Though Massasoit was the first dormitory to change from a single-sex dorm to a co-ed dorm in 1969, Gulick was the first dormitory built with the intention to house both men and women. Gulick had sections designated for males and females, explaining the complicated interior structure in which there are different letter/floor names, and different areas which are often surprisingly hard to get to.

Chronology

1968: Construction began in the summer.

1969: September 1969 the building is ready for occupancy.

1970: May 29th, 1970 Dedication ceremony.

Extent

.5 Linear Feet (1 box)

Language of Materials

English

Metadata Rights Declarations

Arrangement

Since this is an artificially created collection there is no original order. The collection is organized as follows: general information about the dormitory, floor plans, and dedication materials, and photographs and slides of the dormitory’s interior and exterior. Other than digitized items, there is no particular order within the folders.

History of the Collection

There was no formal acquisition of the materials for this collection. The collection is artificially created. Materials were received from different places at different times. The Acquisition sources and dates of the materials are unknown.

Digitized Materials

Browse digitized materials from this collection. This collection is partially digitized.

Related Materials: Records Within Springfield College Collections

  1. RG 110- Springfield College Building and Grounds Records
  2. Springfield College Trustee Records
  3. Springfield College Marketing and Communication Records--Scrapbooks and News Clippings
  4. MS503 – Luther Halsey Gulick Papers
  5. Student Life—Photographs
  6. Resident Activities Records
  7. Springfield College Yearbook Collection
  8. Springfield College Newspaper Collection
  9. Springfield College Catalog Collection
Title
Gulick Hall Records
Status
Completed
Author
Amanda DiPaolo
Date
2009-12
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Revision Statements

  • 2011-12: Revisions made to the finding aid by Jeffrey Monseau.
  • 2022-07: Transferring information from the original Word document to ArchivesSpace.

Repository Details

Part of the Springfield College Archives and Special Collections Repository

Contact:
Springfield College
Judd Gymnasia
263 Alden Street
Springfield Massachusetts 01109 U.S.A. US
413-748-3309