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LOCATION
5: COLLEGE AVENUE AT THE COLLEGE ARCH
Original Campus
| The first five acres of the campus
were donated by the Rev. Albertus Van Raalte in 1853. He gave
eleven more acres in 1860 when the campus was enlarged to include
the entire area between College and Columbia Avenues and Tenth
and Twelfth Streets. Eleventh Street between College and Columbia
was closed that year. The main part of the campus now extends
from Eighth to Fourteenth Streets and from Central to Lincoln
Avenues. The formal front entrance to Hope College is the arch
that was donated by the Class of 1912. Nearby is the traditional
symbol of Hope, the anchor which was placed in 1965. Van Raalte,
the founder of the college, chose an anchor as the symbol,
based on Hebrews 6.19: "We have this hope, a sure and steadfast
anchor of the soul,...." He also called the institution his "Anchor
of Hope" in an early report. The historical marker on the north
side of the arch was dedicated in 1963. A brief history of
Hope College is featured on both sides of the marker. |
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Graves Hall and Winants Auditorium

(Photo: Winants Auditorium during its years
as the library reading room.) |
Nathan
F. Graves of Syracuse, New York, and Garret E. Winants of
Bergen Point, New Jersey, provided the funds for this Richardsonian-style
building. The building was dedicated on June 26, 1894, and
was constructed of Waverly Stone which was quarried east
of town. Winants Auditorium served as the college chapel
until 1929, when the Memorial Chapel (later named Dimnent)
opened. Graves was used as a library until Van Zoeren Library
was completed in 1961. The building was then renovated for
classroom use and Winants Auditorium was restored.
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Voorhees Hall
| The building was a gift
of Ralph and Elizabeth Voorhees of New Jersey and cost $40,000.
Construction took place during the administration of President
Gerrit Kollen and the building was dedicated in 1907. Dr. Samuel
O. Mast, a faculty member, designed the building in a Flemish
style. It was the first building on the campus lighted by electricity.
Voorhees Hall was restored in 1980-81. |
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Gordon and Margaret
Van Wylen Library
| When the
architects of the firm of Shepley Bullfinch Richardson and
Abbott of Boston visited the campus February of 1983, they
decided that the new library should be based on the design
of Voorhees Hall, called "Renaissance Flemish." Ground was
broken in 1986 and the library was dedicated on April 21, 1988. |

(Photo: Ribbon cutting with L-R John Jacobson,
Gordon Van Wylen, Margaret Van Wylen, and John Hope Franklin) |
(Photo: Director Larry Wagenaar helping
a patron at the Joint Archives.)
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The Joint Archives of
Holland is located at Theil Research Center on 9 East 10th
Street. A department of the college, the archives is a unique
enterprise that brings together the archival collections of
the college with those of the Holland Museum, Western Theological
Seminary, and others that contract for archival services. It
is the main repository for historical information on the region
and a principal source for the study of Dutch immigration to
America. |
Van Zoeren Hall
| The building opened in 1961 as the
Van Zoeren Library. It was given by Dr. and Mrs. G. John (Elizabeth)
Van Zoeren. The site is that of the first public school in
Holland and was donated by the Rev. Albertus C. Van Raalte
in 1848. After the opening of the Van Wylen Library, the building
was renovated and converted into a classroom building. It also
houses the offices of the economics and business administration,
education, and sociology and social work, as well as the office
of the dean of the social sciences and the Carl Frost Center
for Social Science Research. |
(Photo: Van Zoeren Hall in the mid-1960s.)
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Vanderwerf Hall
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Completed in 1963, the building was
first called the Math-Physics building because those departments
are housed in it. It was renamed VanderWerf Hall in 1981 in
honor of Dr. Calvin A. VanderWerf, who served as president
of the college from 1963 to 1970. |
Peale Science Center
| The science
departments, which outgrew the facilities of the old science
building, now Lubbers Hall, moved into this building during
the summer of 1973. The building was dedicated on October 26,
1973, and named in honor of Norman and Ruth Stafford Peale.
Construction of a major addition to Peale will begin in 2000.
The quality of the natural science division contributes much
to Hope's strong reputation as a liberal arts college. |

(Photo: R-L, Norman and Ruth Peale along
with Stanley Kresge cut the ribbon for the science center.) |
Dimnent Memorial Chapel
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The chapel's cornerstone, engraved
with the college motto Spera in Deo (Hope Thou in God),
was laid on October 12, 1927, during the administration of
President Edward D. Dimnent (1918-1931). The Skinner organ
was a gift of the Bernard Arendshorst, Sr., family and the
chimes were from the McLean family in memory of Ida Sears McLean.
The Pels and Van Leeuwen organ in the balcony was installed
in 1971. The rose window was given by the Class of 1916 and
is one of the finest examples of stained glass in western Michigan
The chapel was renamed Dimnent Memorial Chapel on August 19,
1959. |
Admissions House
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The Office of Admissions moved into
its quarters on the corner of 10th Street and College Avenue
in 1988. It was constructed with a gift from Peter H. Huizenga.
Numerous tours given of the campus for prospective students
and parents each year start here. |
Haworth Inn and Conference Center and
Cook Residence Hall
| The Gerard Haworth and Peter Cook
families were the primary donors of this facility, which was
dedicated on May 22, 1997. The conference center contains meeting
rooms, a dining room, and fifty guest rooms. The student residence
has forty-five two-room suites. Site clearance began in March
of 1995. Many of the homes on the site were moved to other
locations, while some had to be demolished. This extensive
facility is one of the results of the Hope in the Future fundraising
campaign inaugurated by President John H. Jacobson. |
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Knickerbocker Theatre
Donated to the college in 1988, the Knickerbocker
Theatre is a multi-purpose facility. With a seating capacity that
exceeds 500, it hosts film series, concerts, and several assemblies
for students, faculty and staff. It plays a major part in Hope's
cultural offerings.
100th East 8th Street

(Photo: 100 E 8th Street & the KnickerbockerTheatre) |
Next door to the Knickerbocker
Theatre is the 100 East Complex. It houses the Van Raalte Institute,
Career Services, Hope Academy of Senior Professionals (HASP),
and classrooms. It also houses a number of private offices. |
| The A. C. Van Raalte Institute is
a historical research center, focusing on Dutch American history
of the 19th and 20th centuries. It supports research and writing
on the history and heritage of the Holland area. Named for
A. C. Van Raalte, the founder of both Hope College and Holland,
Michigan, the Institute was established in 1994 through a generous
gift from Peter H. Huizenga and his mother, Elizabeth Huizenga. |
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Location
6: Van Raalte Commons
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