Memorial Hall: Difference between revisions
Markmcumber (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Building Name:''' Memorial Hall[[File:Memorial hall.jpg|thumb|right|400x269px | '''Building Name:''' Memorial Hall[[File:Memorial hall.jpg|thumb|right|400x269px]] | ||
'''Other Names:''' Memorial Building, Mem Hall | '''Other Names:''' Memorial Building, Mem Hall | ||
Line 26: | Line 26: | ||
*UA Case 123; Section 3, Box 2; Memorial Hall. | *UA Case 123; Section 3, Box 2; Memorial Hall. | ||
{{Copyright}} | {{Copyright}}<br/> | ||
[[Category:Buildings]]<br/>[[Category:Fredericton]]<br/>[[Category:Fine Arts at UNB|Memorial]] | [[Category:Buildings]]<br/>[[Category:Fredericton]]<br/>[[Category:Fine Arts at UNB|Memorial]] [[Category:UNB Fredericton]] |
Revision as of 14:09, 23 July 2015
Building Name: Memorial Hall
Other Names: Memorial Building, Mem Hall
Civic Address: 9 Bailey Dr.
Sod Turning: 1923
Cornerstone Laying: 3 July 1923 by Governor General Vimy
Opened for Use: 1924
Official Opening: 19 May 1925 (Dedication) by Sir George E. Foster
Architect: F. Neil Brodie
Named for: Named in commemoration of UNB students and alumni that fought and died in the First World War.
Renovations/changes/additions: Two windows unveiled in 1926 are in memory of The Earl of Ashburnham (depicted is Shakespeare reading to Queen Elizabeth) and Lieutenant George Paget Owen. In 1927 a large window over the stage was unveiled in memory of W.D. Rankin’s son and daughter (depicted is the triumph of good over evil from Paradise Lost). A window was donated which depicts scenes from Robert Burns’ poetry in 1929. A memorial window to Loring W. Bailey unveiled on 14 May 1931 (depicted are scenes from Longfellow’s poetry). Two memorial windows were unveiled 22 January 1943 to the memory of Sir Douglas Hazen and Dr. Henry Seabury Bridges (depicted is Aristotle instructing his followers). The building was renovated in 1970.
Notes: Originally both a Science building and a convocation hall, Memorial Hall has housed physics, chemistry, chemical engineering, electrical engineering and physical education and a dining hall. Two radio stations, CFNB and CHSR, began broadcasts from the basement. Currently Memorial Hall is home to the UNB Art Centre and the Centre for Musical Arts.
Source(s):
- Leroux, John. Building A University: The Architecture of UNB. Fredericton: Goose Lane Editions, 2010, p. 36-39.
- UA Case 123; Section 3, Box 2; Memorial Hall.
© UNB Archives & Special Collections, 2014