Harkness Tower
Harkness Tower | |
---|---|
General information | |
Architectural style | Collegiate Gothic |
Location | New Haven, Connecticut |
Construction started | 1917 |
Completed | 1921 |
Owner | Yale University |
Height | 216 ft. (66 m) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 9 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | James Gamble Rogers |
Other designers | Lee Lawrie, sculptor |
Harkness Tower is a masonry tower at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. Part of the Collegiate Gothic Memorial Quadrangle complex completed in 1922, it is named for Charles William Harkness, brother of Yale's largest benefactor, Edward Harkness.
History
[edit]The tower was constructed between 1917 and 1921 as part of the Memorial Quadrangle donated to Yale by Anna M. Harkness in honor of her recently deceased son, Charles William Harkness, an 1883 Yale graduate.[1] When the residential college system was inaugurated in 1933, the tower became part of Branford College.
It was designed by James Gamble Rogers, a Yale College classmate of Anna Harkness's other son, Edward S. Harkness. James S. Hedden was the contractor's supervisor for the project and took many photographs of the construction's progress.[2]
The tower underwent renovations from September 2009 to May 2010 to repair its masonry and ornament.[3]
Influence
[edit]Harkness Tower was the first couronne ("crown") tower in English Perpendicular Gothic style built in the modern era.[1][4] James Gamble Rogers, who designed the tower and many of Yale's Collegiate Gothic structures, said it was inspired by the 15th-century Boston Stump, the 272-foot (83 m) tower of the parish church of St Botolph in Boston, Lincolnshire[1] and tallest parish church tower in England. Rogers also based some details on the 16th-century tower of St Giles' Church in Wrexham, Wales, where Elihu Yale is buried. In turn, Harkness Tower has been identified as the direct influence for the tower of the Cathedral of Christ the King in Hamilton, Ontario.[5]
The tower's image was adopted by the Yale Herald, a weekly student newspaper, for its masthead.
Design
[edit]Harkness Tower is 216 feet (66 m) tall, one foot for each year since Yale's founding at the time it was built. From a square base, it rises in stages to a double stone crown on an octagonal base, and at the top are stone finials. From the street level to the roof, there are 284 steps.
Midway to the top, four openwork copper clockfaces tell the hours. The bells of the carillon are behind the clockfaces, fixed to a frame made of steel I-beams. The playing console of the carillon is at the level of the balconies immediately below the clock faces. Lower levels of the tower house a water tank (no longer used), two practice carillons, the old chimes playing console, office space for the Yale University Guild of Carillonneurs, and a memorial chapel.
Materials
[edit]The tower was built of separate stone blocks, and reinforced with steel in 1966 to handle the new bells in the carillon.
This paragraph possibly contains original research. (October 2017) |
Yale tour guides frequently mention the legend that the tower was the world's tallest free-standing stone structure until it required reinforcement after an eccentric architect or philanthropist ordered acid to be poured down the walls to make it look older. In reality, the Washington Monument was the country's tallest such structure long before Harkness Tower was built.
Ornamentation
[edit]The tower's decorative elements were sculpted by Lee Lawrie. The lowest level of sculpture depicts Yale's Eight Worthies: Elihu Yale, Jonathan Edwards, Nathan Hale, Noah Webster, James Fenimore Cooper, John C. Calhoun, Samuel F. B. Morse, and Eli Whitney. The second level of sculpture depicts Phidias, Homer, Aristotle, and Euclid. The next level of sculpture consists of allegorical figures depicting Medicine, Business, Law, the Church, Courage and Effort, War and Peace, Generosity and Order, Justice and Truth, Life and Progress, and Death and Freedom. The gargoyles on the top level depict Yale's students at war and in study (a pen-wielding writer, a proficient athlete, a tea-drinking socialite, and a diligent scholar), along with masks of Homer, Virgil, Dante, and Shakespeare.
Reception
[edit]This section possibly contains original research. (October 2017) |
The witticism, attributed to various modernist architects, that had they to choose any place in New Haven to live s/he would select the Harkness Tower, for then they "would not have to look at it," is apparently apocryphal, derivative of a similar story told of Guy de Maupassant and the Eiffel Tower.
Carillon
[edit]The tower contains the Yale Memorial Carillon, a 54-bell carillon. It is a transposing instrument; the C bell sounds a concert B. Ten bells were installed in 1922 and 44 added in 1966. The instrument is played by members of a student-run group set up for the purpose, the Yale Guild of Carillonneurs, and selected guest carillonneurs. During the school year, the instrument is played twice per day: a half-hour session at 12:30 p.m. and a one-hour session at 5:30 p.m. (Some residents of Branford College and Saybrook College, of which the tower forms a part of the periphery, have been known to refer to the daily performances as "Heavy Metal.")[citation needed] In summer it is played only in the evening, plus a summer series of Friday concerts. Carillon play was suspended in 2009 and 2010 during the tower's renovation.
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Yamasaki, Tritia. "The Character of Harkness Tower". Archived from the original on 9 November 2000. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
- ^ Hedden, James S. "Guide to the Photographs of Memorial Quadrangle, Yale University" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 June 2008. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
- ^ Arnsdorf, Isaac (20 August 2009). "Renovations Underway at Harkness Tower". Yale Daily News. Archived from the original on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2014.
- ^ Williams, Stanley T. (26 October 1921). "The Harkness Memorial Tower". American Architect. 120 (9): 315–316.
- ^ Wubbenhorst, Paula (2004). "America's Influence on the Cathedral of Christ the King in Hamilton" (PDF). Journal of the Society for the Study of Architecture in Canada. 29 (3, 4): 41–50. Archived from the original (PDF) on 7 April 2014. Retrieved 3 April 2014.