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Old East

Old East
Old East.jpg
Old East
Old East is located in North Carolina
Old East
Old East is located in the US
Old East
Location University of North Carolina campus, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Coordinates 35°54′45″N 79°3′3″W / 35.91250°N 79.05083°W / 35.91250; -79.05083Coordinates: 35°54′45″N 79°3′3″W / 35.91250°N 79.05083°W / 35.91250; -79.05083
Built 1793
Architect Multiple
Architectural style Italianate
Part of Chapel Hill Historic District (#71000604)
NRHP Reference #

66000596

Significant dates
Added to NRHP October 15, 1966
Designated NHL December 21, 1965
Designated CP December 16, 1971

66000596

Old East is a residence hall located at the north part of campus in University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. When it was built in 1793, it became the first state university building in the United States. The Wren Building at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia, was built in 1695, but William and Mary did not become a public university until 1906.

Colonel John Hogan, entered into a contract December 1792, to make 150,000 bricks at the site of where Old East would be built. He also donated 200 acres towards the University grounds. The cornerstone of Old East was laid ceremoniously on October 12, 1793 by William Richardson Davie, who served as the governor of North Carolina from 1798 to 1799. The building was originally two stories tall and contained sixteen rooms. The design reflects the University trustees' vision of a quadrangle that ran north toward the town of Chapel Hill. Although the cost of construction is unknown, there are records from 1799 indicating that the University spent a total of $12,180 for work on Steward's Hall, Old East, Person Hall, and the President's House. After its construction, Old East functioned as both a classroom building and a Residence Hall; today it is exclusively a Residence Hall.

The contractor in charge of the construction of Old East was James Patterson of Chatham County. By 1804, the building needed significant repairs and was renovated with new doors, window sashes, ladders, and the roof was repainted. The third story was added to the building in 1823. Alexander Jackson Davis was hired by the University in 1844 to lengthen the building by a third and to create a new north entrance. The new rooms were used by the Philanthropic Society and also served as a library. Davis' other additions included large north-facing windows encased by brick panels and two brick porches on the east side of the building. Thomas Day, a skilled and respected African-American cabinetmaker, designed and built the interior woodwork in the society rooms. Old East remained the home of the Philanthropic Society until New East was completed in 1860.


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