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OriginsThe CityCollegeville (1887, 1895) Avondale (1913) The CampusChronology
Sites on the National and State Historic Registers |
Farm foreman's house (1869 — c.1927?)
Day-to-day operation of the College farm and gardens was handled by a foreman and several laborers, who lived on the grounds in a succession of small cottages, including one that was originally the Smith cabin and pre-dated the founding of the Agricultural College. As the land was cleared to expand the useful farmland and the staff grew, the "cottage formerly occupied as a farm house was entirely too small to afford the requisite accommodations."[Beal, p.268] Therefore in 1869 the College built a new "Farm House" to be occupied by the farm foreman and laborers, a two-story brick residence measuring 33 by 42 feet. It was located well to the east of the "campus" buildings (College Hall, Williams Hall, and Saints' Rest), near a growing complex of farm buildings at the western edge of a large range of experimental gardens and orchards that extended east to the present Bogue Street. At the time it was one of the easternmost buildings on campus, and when built it was probably considered to be deep within the farm. But as the academic area grew and the farm buildings gradually crept further east and south, it began to be surrounded by laboratories. Horticulture, Agriculture, and Botany were added in the 1888-1892 era, creating a gently-delineated laboratory row. For a few years, the farm foreman's house was flanked by Botany and Agriculture.[Lautner, pp.74, 80]
By 1900, the new Dairy replaced the foreman's house in the lab row. The house was moved twenty rods to the southeast where a smaller building had stood: the herdsman's house, which was moved north and a little east.* By the time of Beal's writing in 1913, the foreman's house had "for some years past" been occupied only by the foreman and his family, the laborers having moved to other cottages or into off-campus housing.[Beal, p.268. Lautner, p.102] This new site for the farm foreman's house was the southwest corner of Farm Lane and what is now East Circle Drive. When the Kedzie Chemical Laboratory was built in 1927 immediately to the west, the house was either moved again or torn down. Its final demise is unclear to this author. The campus map of 1931 shows a "Farm House" near Harrison Road where Breslin Center now stands, but offers no clue if this is the same building. Regardless, it too is missing from the 1941 map.[Dressel, pp.365-366]
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![]() Michigan State: The First Hundred Years, 1855-1955 by Madison Kuhn |
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