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CUPOLA REPLICA OFFERS NEW
LINK TO ECU'S HERITAGE
East Carolina University dedicated on Saturday (Nov. 2)
its new campus landmark -- the replica of the Old Austin Cupola.
The new cupola is a double-size version of the domed roof structure
that once crowned the top of the original Austin Building. Austin
was among the first buildings constructed on campus and was the
early site of classrooms and administrative offices.
The building was torn down in 1969 after being deemed structurally
unsound. A fine arts center, the home of the School of Art, is
at the site today.
ECU officials have described the new cupola as a "visual
centerpiece representing East Carolina's rich past and bright
future."
In the dedication ceremony the university honored the William P. Furr, James
H. Maynard and the Weil-Rosenthal families, major donors for the
cupola project.
James L. Lanier, the vice chancellor for Institutional
Advancement gave welcoming and introduced guests. He was followed Robert A. Ward
of Burlington, chairman of the Board
of Trustees, and by Chancellor Richard R. Eakin.
James W. Batten, a professor emeritus at the ECU School of Education,
recited the history of the original Austin Building and recalled
the days when he taught in the building. Batten recently published
a book about some of the events in ECU's history.
The Austin Building opened in 1909 and was one of the four original
buildings of the East Carolina Teachers Training School. It was
named in honor of Herbert E. Austin who taught science and geography
on the campus from 1909 to 1929.
During its early years the building housed classrooms, an auditorium,
a library, meeting rooms and administrative offices.
Batten said that when the university decided to raze the building
60 years after its construction, members of the faculty contributed
a total of $3,800 towards preserving the original cupola. The
plans went well until the construction crane tried to lift the
cupola from the roof. The cupola collapsed into pieces.
The sight of the cupola replica has produced memories of the
old building by faculty and former students.
Richard A. Stephenson, a professor of planning, recalled the
time when ECU got its first computer and moved it into the basement
of Austin. He said that he and another professor were experimenting
one evening with the bulky, desk-size machine by playing a few
rounds of tic tac toe. The computer had only 300 kilobytes of
memory.
As they worked with the computer, a heavy thunderstorm moved into the area and
within a few minutes the basement was covered by water. Stephenson
said he went out on campus and found cinderblocks to put under
the computer to keep its circuits dry above the one foot of water
that accumulated in the basement before the rain stopped.
Keats Sparrow, the dean of the College of Arts and Sciences and
a former student at ECU, recalled that old Austin was the most
attractive building on the campus in its day. One feature in
particular left him with a lasting impression.
"When students changed classes there was a very loud noise,"
he said. "But it brings back pleasant memories for all of
us who occupied that building to remember those noises."
Dr. Sparrow describes the cupola replica as "a wonderful
symbol of the early days of our campus." He said "the
cupola is the part of old Austin Building that is most remembered
and this reproduction of it in the center of our campus just reminds
us of our days as students here and for few of us, our days as
faculty members here."
The cupola is on the east campus mall in front of the old entrance
to Joyner Library. At night, the lighted structure will be visible
from Fifth Street on the north edge of the campus.
An interesting feature of the plaza is the brick walkway with
names inscribed on each brick. More than 1,100 alumni and friends
of ECU contributed $250 for each brick that is named. The project
raised $275,000 to support the university's academic and alumni
outreach programs.
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gat/11-2-96
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