1870: Bonner-Marquand Gymnasium
View from the south circa 1870's
The first campus gymnasium, built in 1859 where Witherspoon Hall now stands, was a wooden barn-like structure that was set on fire in the summer of 1865 by townspeople who heard that a vagrant with yellow fever had slept there. Shortly after newly-arrived President James McCosh expressed his support of organized athletics in 1868, construction began on a new center for physical education and improvement. Upon its completion in 1870, the Bonner-Marquand Gymnasium (with measurements slightly smaller than a modern basketball court) was considered the finest facility in the country and served the College for nearly forty years.
Princeton’s first instructor in physical education and director of the gymnasium was George Goldie.
Bonner-Marquand Gym in Evolution of the Campus
(More information on Bonner-Marquand Gym)
Text: https://www.princeton.edu/frist/iconography/p6.shtml
Photo: Princeton University Archives, Mudd Library, Grounds & Buildings, Box 38
View from southeast, with Halstead Observatory in background
Link to Halstead Observatory
Photo from album, 1871
Source: Princeton University Archives, Mudd Library, Grounds & Buildings, Box 56
View from southeast circa 1877
Source: Princeton University Archives, Mudd Library, Grounds & Buildings, Box 38
View from southeast with University Hotel at left
Source: Princeton University Archives, Mudd Library, Grounds & Buildings, Box 38
Interior circa 1974
Source: Princeton University Archives, Mudd Library, Grounds & Buildings, Box 38
View from southeast circa 1879
Source: The Princeton Book (1879), offprint (PU Archives)
View from west circa 1881
Source: Princeton University Archives, Mudd Library, Grounds & Buildings, Box 11
Statue of Gladiator, gift of Class of 1880 (photo c.1881)
For a brief history of this ill-fated statue, click here.
Source: Princeton University Archives, Mudd Library, Grounds & Buildings, SP3