1913: Cuyler Hall
View from northwest (photo circa 1924)
Source: Princeton University Archives, Mudd Library, Grounds & Buildings, SP 2
View from northwest, with Patton Hall at right (photo circa 1954)
Source: Princeton University Archives, Mudd Library, Grounds & Buildings, MP 30
View from south (photo circa 1954)
Source: Princeton University Archives, Mudd Library, Grounds & Buildings, MP 30
item |
View from northwest (photo circa 1924) |
physical campus |
Cuyler Hall |
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View from northwest, with Patton Hall at right (photo circa 1954) |
physical campus |
Cuyler Hall |
item |
View from south (photo circa 1954) |
physical campus |
Cuyler Hall |
Cuyler Hall was built in memory of Cornelius C. Cuyler, a New York banker who was a trustee of the University from 1898 until his death in 1909. His had always been "a magical name for any 1879 man," his classmate, Woodrow Wilson, then governor of New Jersey, said at the dedication of the building in 1912, and it was "singularly appropriate" that a dormitory "symbolic of the democratic life and the comradeships of the University" should bear his name. "He always meant to me a singular stimulation," Governor Wilson concluded, "he imparted his own energy to everything he did. Let us hope that his spirit will in some degree touch the life of this dormitory."
Source: Leitch p. 125
More information on Cuyler Hall
Cuyler Hall in Evolution of the Campus