960 resultados para Gust front
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Michael Staebler bicycle shop, West Washington St.
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Homeopathic Hospital until 1922; then used as South Department of University Hospital 1922-1939; then North Hall (home of ROTC) 1939.
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Looking northeast from Michigan Union
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McNichols at Greenlawn
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Albert Kahn, architect. Building completed 1924. Named James Burrill Angell Hall. Sometimes called Literary College. Interior ceiling decorations: Di Lorenzo Studios, N.Y.
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Built 1918. Buildings and Grounds Dept., architects. Torn down 1932. Located east of Glen, downhill and behind western-most hospital building
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Smith, Hinchman & Grylls, architects. W.B. Wood Co., construction. View toward east., west side, and front of building
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Smith, Hinchman & Grylls, architects. W.B. Wood Co., construction. View toward east. west side and front of building
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Smith, Hinchman & Grylls, architects. W.B. Wood Co., construction. Note re: Washington Street sign. Washington is not correct as it runs east/west in front of building.
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West stack. Albert Kahn, architect. Selden Breck contractors built stacks 1916-1918. Construction of General Library Building authorized June 1916. Two stacks built at right angles to 1898 stacks, which were retained. In 1918 Old Library was demolished and front (north side) of General Library begun. Completed in 1920. Photograph mounted on linen. From construction photo album received by Buildings and Grounds
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Front (north) of General Library. Albert Kahn, architect. Selden Breck contractors built stacks 1916-1918. Construction of General Library Building authorized June 1916. Two stacks built at right angles to 1898 stacks, which were retained. In 1918 Old Library was demolished and front (north side) of General Library begun. Completed in 1920.
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Albert Kahn, architect. In 1918 the old library was demolished and a new front (north facade) was attached to the 1893 stacks and the stacks built in 1916-1917. This was referred to as the (New) General Library until the south stack addition was built in 1967-1970, when the entire library building was named the Harlan Hatcher Graduate Library.
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Cornerstone laid May 26, 1888; dedicated June 1891. Gift of Helen H. Newberry of Detroit as headquarters of Students' Christian Association. Leased by U-M as classroom in 1921; gift to U-M from SCA in 1937. Adapted as museum in 1928, named the Francis W. Kelsey Museum of Archaeology in 1953. Several people in image. On verso: C.T. Stoner, 7668 Grand St., Dexter, Mich. [donor]