UIHistories Project: A History of the University of Illinois by Kalev Leetaru
N A V I G A T I O N D I G I T A L L I B R A R Y
Bookmark and Share



Repository: UIHistories Project: Board of Trustees Minutes - 1878 [PAGE 122]

Caption: Board of Trustees Minutes - 1878
This is a reduced-resolution page image for fast online browsing.


Jump to Page:
< Previous Page [Displaying Page 122 of 300] Next Page >
[VIEW ALL PAGE THUMBNAILS]




EXTRACTED TEXT FROM PAGE:



122 orchards, gardens, nurseries, forest plantations, arboretum, ornamental grounds, and military parade ground. T h e University buildings, fifteen in number, include a grand main building for public use, one large and two small dormitory buildings, a large mechanical and drill hall, a large chemical laboratory, a veterinary hall, a small astronomical observatory, three dwellings, two large barns, and a large green-house. The mechanical building and drill hall is of brick, 126 feet in length and 88 feet in width. I t contains a boiler, forge and tank room ; a machine shop, furnished for practical use, with a steam engine, lathes, and other machinery ; a pattern and furnishing shop, shops for carpentry and cabinet work, furnished with wood-working machinery; paint and draughting-rooms, and rooms for models, storage, etc. I n the second story is the large drill hall, 124 by 80 feet, sufficient for the evolutions of a company of infantry, or a section of a battery of field artillery. It is also well supplied with gymnastic apparatus. One of the towers contains an armorer's shop and military model room, an artillery room and a band room. The other contains a printing office and editor's room. The large dormitory building is 125 feet in length and five stories in height. It affords 80 dormitory rooms for students. Two smaller dormitory buildings contain eight rooms each. The new chemical building, erected in 1878, at a cost, including furniture, of $40,000, contains five laboratories, and is said by good judges, to be one of the best and largest in the United States.

PROPERTY AND F U N D S .

Besides its lands, buildings, furniture, library, etc., valued at $470,000, the University owns 25,000 acres of well-selected lands in Minnesota and Nebraska. It has also endowment funds invested in state and county bonds amounting to $319,000, besides other property and avails valued at $33,000. The state has appropriated $25,000 to the agricultural department for barns, tools, stock, etc.; $20,000 to the horticultural department for green-house, barns, drainage, tools, trees, etc.; $25,000 for mechanical and military building, machinery, e t c . ; $127,000 toward the erection of the main building, and furnishing the s a m e ; $10,500 for chemical apparatus; $25,000 for library and apparatus ; $5,000 for the apparatus of a physical laboratory; $3,000 for a veterinary hall, stable and apparatus; $40,000 for chemical build i n g ; besides smaller amounts for agricultural experiments, etc

MUSEUM AND COLLECTIONS.

'The collections of minerals, fossils, shells, birds, mammals, insects, plants, etc., have been made with much care, and are notably large in some departments, affording valuable facilities in the study of natural history and geology. The collection in entomology is one of the largest in the west. W i t h the aid of a late state appropriation, valuable collections of mammals, birds and fishes have been purchased, embracing many specimens of great rarity and value. One of the trustees presented the full series of celebrated casts of fossils made by Prof. H . A. W a r d , of Rochester, N . Y. This collec-