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Lowell House

Lowell House
Residential House at Harvard University
Lowell House (Harvard) shield and logo.jpg
University Harvard University
Location 10 Holyoke Place
Coordinates 42°22′15″N 71°07′05″W / 42.37078°N 71.11818°W / 42.37078; -71.11818Coordinates: 42°22′15″N 71°07′05″W / 42.37078°N 71.11818°W / 42.37078; -71.11818
Motto Occasionem Cognosce (Latin)
Established 1930
Named for Abbott Lawrence Lowell and the Lowell family
Colours Blue, White
Sister college Pierson College
Faculty Deans Diana L. Eck and Dorothy Austin
Undergraduates 400
Called Lowellians
Website www.lowell.harvard.edu

Lowell House is one of twelve undergraduate residential Houses at Harvard University, located on Holyoke Place facing Mount Auburn Street between Harvard Yard and the Charles River. Officially, it is named for the Lowell family, but an ornate ALL woven into the ironwork above the main gate discreetly alludes to Abbott Lawrence Lowell, Harvard's president at the time of construction. Its majestic neo-Georgian design, centered on two landscaped courtyards, received the 1938 Harleston Parker Medal and might be considered the model for later Harvard houses nearby. Lowell House is simultaneously close to the Yard, Harvard Square, and other Harvard "River" houses, and its blue-capped bell tower, visible for many miles, is a local landmark.

Lowell was one of the first Houses built in realization of President Lowell's long-held dream of providing on-campus accommodations for every Harvard College student throughout his career at the College. (See Harvard College house system.) Its first Master was Mathematics Department chairman Julian Lowell Coolidge, who also instituted Monday-night High Table. Historian Elliott Perkins was the first to hold the position of Resident Dean (until recently known as the Allston Burr Senior Tutor) then was Master from 1942 to 1963. Classicist Zeph Stewart was the third Master, and William and Mary Lee Bossert served from 1975 to 1998. Current co-Masters Diana Eck and Dorothy Austin are thus only the fifth Masters in Lowell's 80 years. Lowell's sister college at Yale University is Pierson College.

House traditions include Masters' Tea on Thursday afternoons, a May Day Waltz at dawn on the Weeks Footbridge, High Table, and the annual Lowell House Opera mounted in the dining hall. Springtime brings the Bacchanalia Formal, often with a live swing band in the courtyard.


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