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Lexington, Fayette County, Kentucky
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A September 22 letter from Charlottesville details the architectural plan and construction progress of the University of Virginia's pavilions and dormitories along a central lawn, noting high-quality workmanship but lamenting insufficient funds, urging legislative support for faster completion to benefit education in Virginia and beyond.
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UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA.
The deep interest we feel in this institution induces us to give the following description of the buildings, from a letter to the editor, dated Charlottesville, Sept. 22.
"As you are as well as myself, a warm friend to the University of Virginia, it will perhaps not be uninteresting to you to know what is doing here towards the accomplishment of this great work. I must first give you a general outline of the plan, that you may know what portion of the work is executed. It is contemplated to build on each side of a lawn about two hundred feet wide, and on a beautiful eminence, a range of buildings, for the accommodation of the professors and students. There are to be five pavilions on each side, from 60 to 100 feet apart; each pavilion has a lecture room, and 4 or 5 other rooms, for the use of the professors. The intervals between the pavilions are filled up with dormitories sufficiently large for two students to each. About thirty dormitories on each side of the lawn will fill up the intervals between the pavilions. Gardens will be laid off at the back of the pavilions, running back to a street about 250 feet from the lawn and parallel to it. On the back streets, boarding houses and other dormitories will be erected. The lawn will be handsomely improved, by planting trees and sodding it. It will be terminated on the north end by a large circular building, and remain open to the South for any additional buildings that may be found necessary hereafter. So much for the general plan. Now for what is executed. Two pavilions are nearly completed, they are of the very best materials, and the workmanship is well executed, and finished externally with great taste. One of them has a very rich Corinthian entablature; the other finished agreeably to the Ionic order. All the pavilions are to have porticos in front and a colonnade in front of the dormitories, so that the students can go to any lecture room under cover. The buildings will all be finished agreeably to the different orders of Architecture. In addition to the foregoing, four other pavilions, with the intermediate dormitories are now going on, and it is expected one or two more will be put up this fall if the weather is favorable. It is much to be regretted that the funds of this institution are so slender; the subscribers, I understand, pay but little, and the donation of the state will not go far towards completing the establishment. It must therefore be protracted for some years; if aid is not granted from some source or other, and where can we look but to the legislature? It will rest entirely with the next assembly to say whether this important state institution, (that will not only save thousands that are carried out of the state for the education of Virginians, but in all probability, will bring thousands from our sister states to the south and west) shall be finished with expedition, or drag on heavily for years to come. With sufficient funds the buildings could all be completed the next year.'"
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Location
University Of Virginia, Charlottesville
Event Date
Sept. 22
Story Details
A letter outlines the general plan for the University of Virginia's buildings, including pavilions, dormitories, gardens, and a lawn, and describes the progress with two pavilions nearly completed and others under construction, while expressing regret over limited funds and calling for legislative aid to expedite completion.