Jewett House

Jewett House
A U-shaped brick and stone building with a nine-story tower at its back on a clear summer day
Jewett viewed from the southwest in 2014
Map
Alternative namesMilo Jewett House, North Hall, Pilcher's Crime
General information
TypeDormitory
Architectural styleTudor
LocationPoughkeepsie, New York, US
Coordinates41°41′25″N 73°53′50″W / 41.690140°N 73.897089°W / 41.690140; -73.897089
Current tenantsVassar College
Named forMilo P. Jewett
Completed1907
Renovated2002–2003
Cost$212,500
Renovation cost$21 million
OwnerVassar College
Technical details
MaterialBrick, stone
Floor count9
Design and construction
Architect(s)Lewis Pilcher
Architecture firmPilcher and Tachau
Renovating team
Renovating firmHerbert S. Newman & Partners

Jewett House (formally Milo Jewett House and formerly North Hall) is a nine-story Tudor-style dormitory on the campus of Vassar College in the town of Poughkeepsie, New York. Built in 1907 to accommodate increasing demand for residential space, the dorm was designed by Vassar art professor Lewis Pilcher of the architectural firm Pilcher and Tachau. Early reviews looked unfavorably upon Jewett, even dubbing it "Pilcher's Crime" and by 2002, a host of issues plagued the dorm, leading to a $21 million renovation. Up to 195 students of any gender or class year may live in Jewett. The dorm has been purported to be haunted by several different ghosts during its existence.

History

In 1902, Vassar College in the town of Poughkeepsie, New York, completed Davison House, the fourth dorm in the college's residential quadrangle (quad).[1] Enrollment was limited to 1,000 students by 1905 and the college saw a need to further expand the number of dorms available so it approved the creation of a new one. Totaling $212,500, construction was paid for using college funds (versus the donor funds that paid for Strong and Davison Houses).[2][3]

The dormitory was known as North Hall upon its opening. However, by 1915, the college's semicentennial, no donor had stepped forward to help fund the dormitory's construction and Vassar president Henry Noble MacCracken renamed the building Milo Jewett House after Milo P. Jewett.[2][4] Jewett served as Vassar's first president from his election to the office in February 1861 until his departure from the college in spring 1864 after a dispute with the school's founder and namesake, Matthew Vassar. Although Jewett was instrumental in providing a vision for the college, the school did not open until 1865, meaning he never had the chance to oversee its student body.[5]

By 2002, Jewett hosted a spectrum of problems, highlighted in Vassar's alumnae/i magazine as including

an elevator that simply does not stop at the second floor; balconies you can never reach; a mezzanine-level bathroom for residents of the third-floor tower area, complete with stalls so squeezed that those of all heights bruise their kneecaps when they sit to use the facilities; and a stairway tightly wrapped around a nine-story elevator shaft that no longer comes close to meeting fire safety codes.[3]

The college developed a master plan in 2000 to improve campus residences and Jewett was elected as the first to undergo renovation. New Haven, Connecticut-based Herbert S. Newman & Partners were selected for the 15-month project which was completed by October 2003 at a cost of $21 million.[3][6]

Architecture and features

A U-shaped building with a nine-floor tower
A postcard of North Hall c. 1912

Lewis Pilcher of the architectural firm Pilcher and Tachau served as an art professor at Vassar between 1900 and 1911; his firm was responsible for the design of the house.[7] Jewett was built at the north end of the residential quad, northwest of Lathrop House and northeast of Davison House.[8][9] Later projects saw the erection of Josselyn House (1912) to Jewett's west and the Students' Building (1913) to its east.[8][10] It is the only building on the quad, including Rockefeller Hall, with its main facade facing inward.[9]

The dormitory, constructed from brick and stone, consists of a four-story U-shaped main body with a nine-story tower built ostensibly "to help campus water pressure."[2] Construction on the house wrapped up in 1907.[7] Historian Elizabeth A. Daniels notes that while Jewett's design is "generally Tudor in spirit",[2] it contrasts with the rest of the dorms on the quad which are Elizabethan in style.[2][11] Wooden structural support elements are minimal in the house, with the dormitory instead relying on steel and concrete.[9] Instead of using stone for decorative exterior elements including trim and faces, as was common at the time of construction, Pilcher utilized terracotta.[12] Other external features include a pitched copper roof with a low slope, limestone-surrounded entrances, crenellations, and light red brick.[13][14] According to architectural writers Karen Van Lengen and Lisa Reilly, the tower's presence "created a more monumental and less homelike impression than that of its neighbor, Josselyn" which they speculate may have earned the dorm its nickname, "Pilcher's Crime".[12]

Upon opening, the house featured two dining rooms[2] with student rooms arranged along lengthy hallways radiating from the center of the structure. The nine tower floors were only accessible via the ground level, from the dorm's primary entrance hall.[9] An exterior fire escape led down the back of Jewett's tower but was replaced with an interior stairwell during the 2003 renovation.[3]

Jewett is co-ed[15] with a capacity of 195 residents.[4] Students of any grade may live in the house, in either single rooms, one-room doubles, one-room triples, two-room doubles, or suites.[16] A college guide compiled in 2003 by the staff of the Yale Daily News identified the dorm as one of the two most popular at the college, along with Cushing House.[17]

Jewett is allegedly the site of numerous hauntings. An apartment in the dorm's east arm has been purported to be haunted by a Panama suit-clad "gentleman ghost"[18] while claims of a wailing baby's ghost in a disused bathtub in the building have recurred throughout its history.[3]

References

  1. ^ Bruno & Daniels 2001, p. 39.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Daniels 1987, p. 33.
  3. ^ a b c d e Ruff, Veronika (March 2002). "This Old House". Vassar: The Alumnae/i Quarterly. Retrieved October 30, 2015.
  4. ^ a b "Jewett House". Office of Residential Life. Vassar College. Archived from the original on August 17, 2015. Retrieved October 18, 2015.
  5. ^ Van Lengen & Reilly 2004, pp. 4–10.
  6. ^ Arzuaga, Fabian (October 31, 2003). "Students move into Jewett". The Miscellany News. Retrieved October 30, 2015.
  7. ^ a b Bruno & Daniels 2001, p. 44.
  8. ^ a b Vassar College Standard Map (PDF) (Map). Poughkeepsie, NY: Vassar College. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 5, 2015. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  9. ^ a b c d Van Lengen & Reilly 2004, p. 80.
  10. ^ Van Lengen & Reilly 2004, pp. 78–86.
  11. ^ Thompson, Samantha (February 17, 2011). "Two years past renovation, Davison comes to life". The Miscellany News. Retrieved October 15, 2015.
  12. ^ a b Van Lengen & Reilly 2004, p. 81.
  13. ^ Van Lengen & Reilly 2004, pp. 80–81.
  14. ^ Platt et al. 2007, pp. 45–46.
  15. ^ "The Houses". Office of Residential Life. Vassar College. Archived from the original on August 17, 2015. Retrieved October 18, 2015.
  16. ^ Murray, Goldsmith, & Falcone 2011, Dormitories.
  17. ^ Yale Daily News Staff 2003, p. 656.
  18. ^ Rule 2001, p. 54.

Cited

  • Vassar College panoramic tour — Select Residential from the righthand column, then Jewett House – Main Hall, Jewett House – Single, or Jewett House – Small Parlor.
  • Media related to Jewett House at Wikimedia Commons