Web Exclusives:
Under the Ivy
a column by Jane Martin paw@princeton.edu
April 19, 2006:
Great
halls of learning
Ralph Adams Cram championed the collegiate gothic style at
Princeton
By Jane Chapman Martin ’89
In 1936, Ralph Adams Cram published a memoir called
My Life in Architecture. Cram, the University’s head architect
from 1907 to 1929, had an enormous impact on Princeton, devising
the first master plan for the campus and personally overseeing the
building of some 25 campus buildings, most notably the Graduate
College and the University Chapel.
Reflecting on his time at Princeton, Cram wrote:
“At Princeton I first had to work out a general scheme for all future
growth, and during the years I served as supervising architect I
had the deep gratification of seeing this plan carried out in every
essential particular” with the exception, he added, of Dod Hall.
“I never succeeded in getting the ridiculous Dod Hall pushed back
out of the main axis, but this, I think, was the only case in which
I failed in my endeavors.”
Dod Hall — a four-story, Romanesque dormitory finished
in 1891 at a cost of $75,000 was a constant irritant to Cram,
but it serves as a symbol of his passion for his work and his unwillingness
to compromise. Cram’s specific problem with Dod was that it interfered
with the view from Cannon Green and Nassau Hall between Whig and
Clio to the south of campus. It’s hard to recognize today, with
all the buildings and mature trees that blanket Princeton’s campus,
but Nassau Hall actually sits on a high point. At one time it commanded
a view, and likewise could be seen from a distance.
As Cram wrote to President Hibben in his 1929 resignation
letter, “I should have liked to stay on until Dodd [sic] was moved
back or demolished, but anyway the danger of blocking the long axis
by the new library has been removed, so I can wait patiently for
the abolition of Dodd [sic], so freeing the long view in all its
beauty.”
Dod aside, Cram did indeed realize much of his dream
for a campus unified around the collegiate gothic style. At the
end of the 19th century, colleges were in the midst of a building
boom, throwing up buildings as needed and as money came in. As Cram
wrote, “When I assumed the office of supervising architect, the
architectural estate of the University was parlous in the extreme
though no worse than that of the other major institutions of higher
learning. The principle of rugged individualism had run riot for
years, and the result was confusion worse confounded. It was an
established custom that when a donor offered a specific building
he was allowed to pick his site, his architect, and his style. The
results were seldom edifying.”
For nearly 25 years, Cram labored to change that.
He had a belief bordering on religious conviction that collegiate
gothic was the only style suitable to a great institution of higher
learning. He felt that only the gothic style uplifted the spirit
properly in pursuit of both knowledge and of the divine (for Cram,
the two were entwined; he was also a great designer of churches.
Upon the chapel’s dedication in 1925, he wrote that gothic embodied
the “great scholastic and spiritual impulse” that created the storied
English halls of learning, and captured, he hoped, “something of
the thrill and the ineffable rapture of the churches of the Middle
Ages.”
Though Cram had a significant impact on the campus
surrounding Cannon Green, the Graduate College best exhibits his
ideals. Whereas a number of buildings had already been built around
Nassau Hall including the accursed Dod the Graduate College
was a blank canvas. In his book, Cram wrote that the project was
“the most spacious opportunity the office ever had for working out
its, by then, fully established ideas and principles in the matter
of ‘collegiate gothic’ adapted to contemporary conditions. … it
is more or less English 15th century … consistent with the preservation
of that sense of historic and cultural continuity that I am persuaded
is fundamental in all educational and ecclesiastical work.”
Highlights of the Graduate College include the imposing
Cleveland Tower and the medieval Procter Hall dining hall, but Cram’s
vision was not fully realized. In his book he proposed an additional
Graduate College quad, including a chapel, in which services would
be conducted in Latin. In this, he admitted, he had received “scant
sympathy and no support whatsoever.”
Cram would have been horrified at what was eventually
added to his masterpiece. The New Graduate College, built in 1963,
is described on the Graduate School’s Web site as “built in a style
that originated at the Bauhaus and has since become synonymous with
International Modernism.”
Though the Princeton campus has developed radically
over the past 100 years, straying far from Cram’s vision, Cram’s
legacy the identification of gothic style with higher learning
remains strong. And upset as he might have been by the architecture
of the 1960s, he surely would have been gratified by the plan of
the new Whitman College, scheduled to open in the fall of 2007 and
designed by Demetri Porphyrios *80 in the collegiate gothic style.
For more on Cram and Princeton, see “Ralph Adams
Cram: The Man, His Work, and His Legacy at Princeton University”
by Stephen Warneck ’95 at http://etcweb1.princeton.edu/CampusWWW/Studentdocs/Cram.html
Jane Martin 89 is PAW's former editor-in-chief. You can
reach her at paw@princeton.edu
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