Williamson County contact Wayne Ware (512)
863-2202
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Southwestern University Ladies' Annex 1888/1889 to 1925 |
| photo from the book “Southwestern University – 1840 to 1961 by Ralph Wood Jones” ![]() before the H configuration was finshed 1890 ![]() photo from around 1920s it burned down on January 8, 1925 |
Excerpt from the book
The male dormitories were impelled by a desire to furnish less
expensive board and room. They were, therefore, less expensive
structures and could be located on the campus grounds. Although
conceived later, the male facilities were completed first. The
need for the women's building was obvious at the time of the
establishment of the Young Ladies' School in 1878. For the next
five years, the poor financial condition of the university
excluded such plans. The Northwest Texas Annual Conference
meeting, 1883, resulting in pledges to the University totaling
$35,100 stimulated action. Plans for the female building were
delivered to Mood one week prior to his death. The report of the
Board of Trustees for 1885, stated that the site of the building
had been donated and envisioned a structure costing $56,000, of
which $30,000 had been pledged; it also cited the need of a
"Helping Hall System" for men.
Two years elapsed before the board felt sufficiently secure to
begin construction. The first contracts were signed on July 23.
1887, and the last on June 6, 1888. The cornerstone was laid.
September 22, 1887, 3:00 P. M. The ceremonies were conducted by
Grand Master A. J. Rose, of the Masonic Fraternity.
Distinguished guests were invited to participate, including
Governor L. S. Ross and Senator J. H. Reagan.
Occupancy was to have occurred in September, 1888: however, the
move was delayed until March 7, 1889. Five days later the
dedicatory services were held in the Annex Chapel. The program
included several addresses and numbers by the choir to the
accompaniment of an organ, a gift of the Methodist Church in
Cleburne, Texas. After the benediction, the building was opened
to inspection, host and hostess, Professor and Mrs. C. C. Cody.
The site selected for the building, six blocks east of the Main
Building, was a promontory overlooking the rolling prairies and
in the distance, the San Gabriel River. The enchantment of the
site, or perhaps the occupants, eventually lured the campus in
the same direction. The structure was built of white limestone,
four stories high including the mansard roof. Eventually, the
building was to assume an H-shape, probably its original design,
but at this time one of the legs of the "H" was not completed.
All three floors of the southern exposure were protected by
"ginger-breaded" galleries. A bell-tower in the shape of the
lower half of a wasp-waisted woman of Victorian dress was
perched in the center of the outside wall of the building's main
leg.
The Annex contained sleeping apartments, parlors, recitation
rooms, a chapel with "rounded corners for perfect acoustics," a
dining room 78 x 38, music and art rooms, society halls,
gymnasium, library, and infirmary. Descriptions of the new
building extol its elegance. Today, enthusiasm for its living
comforts would be somewhat dimmed by the knowledge that its
original elegance contained neither central heating nor modern
bathroom fixtures. To be able to give an uncontestable
explanation of the financial measures employed to construct the
building would be most satisfying. The labyrinthine character of
the records. which would do justice to a Cretan engineer,
constitutes a formidable hazard to reliability.
Most of the pledges were not paid or nor paid in full value. The
Snyder pledge for $20,000, later increased to $23,000 is a
typical example. The extra amount, lumped in and charged as a
gift. Had been pledged for other purposes at an earlier date.
The whole amount was absolved by deeding thirty-two acres of
land, the site of the Annex, valued at $6,000, and the Snyder
home, valued at $17,000, to the university. The home almost
immediately was sold back to the same parties for $6,256 and
notes for $2,500. Later the university paid off a lien on the
Annex site valued at $1,314 and canceled the notes for $2,500.
The actual cash realized by the university amounted to $4,942.
If the value of the thirty-two acres is added to this amount,
the real value of the pledge was $10,942.
The Ladies' Annex was financed by borrowing money from four
individuals and two firms amounting to $28,893.45, the interest
ranging as high as 11 per cent. This amounts to approximately
80 per cent of the cost of the building.
This financial procedure is of more than particular interest. A
pattern was set for the next three major building efforts: the
Administration Building, Mood Hall, and the Williamson County
Science Building. Money was "borrowed" from the university
itself, money given specifically for endowment or loan fund
purposes. Cannibalization of endowment funds kept the university
on a constant financial treadmill of increasing speed. The
process was not halted and reversed until the middle 1930's.
The Ladies' Annex received one major addition during 1905, an
east wing completing the H-shape. The southern exposure of the
new section did not receive the galleried treatment. The
construction was done by the Belford Lumber Company of
Georgetown at a cost of about $20,000.
The building stood as an
educational land-mark until it burned on the morning of January
8, 1925. |
view other land marks of Georgetown |