Difference between revisions of "Fayerweather Hall"

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[[Image:FayerweatherFront.jpg|thumb|300px|Fayerweather Hall]]
 
[[Image:FayerweatherFront.jpg|thumb|300px|Fayerweather Hall]]
  
'''Fayerweather Hall''' is an old building that hasn't been renovated in decades. Its vintage interiors, which look and feel exactly like what you'd expect an old [[Ivy League]] school academic building to look and feel like, holds captive the history and sociology departments. Walking around the sixth floor and looking at the nameplates of world famous historians on office doors is enough to leave most history students awestruck.  
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'''Fayerweather Hall''' is an old building that hasn't been renovated in decades. Its vintage interiors, which look and feel exactly like what you'd expect an old [[Ivy League]] school academic building to look and feel like, holds captive the [[History Department|History]] and [[Sociology Department|Sociology]] Departments. Walking around the sixth floor and looking at the nameplates of world famous historians on office doors is enough to leave most history students awestruck.  
  
 
It was named after Daniel B. Fayerweather, a wealthy shoe manufacturer who had no connection whatsoever to Columbia, but decided to give a few hundred thousand dollars anyway.
 
It was named after Daniel B. Fayerweather, a wealthy shoe manufacturer who had no connection whatsoever to Columbia, but decided to give a few hundred thousand dollars anyway.
  
 
[[Category:Buildings on the Morningside Heights campus]]
 
[[Category:Buildings on the Morningside Heights campus]]

Revision as of 00:54, 11 April 2007

Fayerweather Hall
Fayerweather Hall

Fayerweather Hall is an old building that hasn't been renovated in decades. Its vintage interiors, which look and feel exactly like what you'd expect an old Ivy League school academic building to look and feel like, holds captive the History and Sociology Departments. Walking around the sixth floor and looking at the nameplates of world famous historians on office doors is enough to leave most history students awestruck.

It was named after Daniel B. Fayerweather, a wealthy shoe manufacturer who had no connection whatsoever to Columbia, but decided to give a few hundred thousand dollars anyway.