Terrell Hall

Terrell Hall

Terrell Hall was built in 1903 to replace the previous building on the same foundation, Science Hall, when it was destroyed by a fire. The original cornerstone for Science Hall is still visible at the northwest corner of Terrell Hall. It is currently the offices of undergraduate admissions and Speech Communication. After the fire the university was able to pay to build Terrell Hall with funds from the insurance payout and also a large earlier gift given by Dr. William Terrell and so the building was named after his financial contribution and to recognize his legacy on the agriculture of Georgia. He was a wealthy planter, politician and surgeon-physician during the Antebellum era. Dr. Terrell worked and is buried in Sparta, Georgia. He was a huge supporter of UGA’s College of Agriculture, was founder and first president for the Hancock Planter’s Society, a group that helped revolutionize Georgia farming techniques. He also represented Hancock County in the Georgia State Legislature, and served four years in the U.S. House of Representatives.

Resources:

“Over the Dog Years: North Campus Buildings a Time Capsule of UGA History” in The Red and Black by Lindsey Conway. Nov. 29, 2014.

http://www.externalaffairs.uga.edu/alumni/index.php/heritage/stories/terrell_hall

Denmark Hall

Denmark Hall

Denmark Hall was built in 1901 as a Dining Hall complete with a kitchen and a dining area that could fit 200 students. Convict labor from the Clarke County Commission was used to grade the land. In 1950 it was converted into an academic building. The students often referred to Denmark by a negative nickname the “Beanery” for its poor quality of food. The dining hall was named in memorial for Brantley Astor Denmark of the class of 1871 when he died at the age of 51 the same year as the building opened. The university wanted to recognize his outstanding leadership and loyal support to the University of Georgia. He led the first alumni fundraising effort in 1897 that raised $40,000 and was later used to build Memorial Hall. Brantley Astor Denmark was a prominent Savannah businessman who served as university trustee, a lawyer, president of the Citizen’s Bank of Savannah, president of the Southern/Western Railroad, curator of the Georgia Historical Society, and a member of his local Board of Education. Today Denmark Hall is home to the Masters of Historic Preservation Program under the College of Environment and Design.

Sources:

http://www.externalaffairs.uga.edu/alumni/index.php/heritage/stories/denmark_hall

http://foodservice.uga.edu/about/history-pictures

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