Flint Laboratory
Flint Laboratory | |
---|---|
Alternative names | Flint Hall Dairy Building Dairy Laboratory |
General information | |
Type | Academic offices, classrooms, former research laboratories, restaurant |
Architectural style | Georgian Revival |
Coordinates | 42°23′30″N 72°31′47″W / 42.3916°N 72.5296°W |
Current tenants | Department of Hospitality and Tourism Management |
Construction started | 1911 |
Completed | 1912 |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 4 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | James H. Ritchie |
Main contractor | Lines Company |
Flint Laboratory is an academic building and a former dairy laboratory at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. It was the first building of the Ellis Drive "agricultural group", including Stockbridge Hall and an unbuilt hall for agricultural mechanics.[1] At the time of its completion, the laboratory was considered to be "one of the best equipped dairy buildings in the United States"[2] and was described as "a model for the whole country" in one edition of the Works Progress Administration guidebook to Massachusetts.[3] The building was named after Charles L. Flint, the university's fourth president, the first secretary of the state board of agriculture, a lecturer on dairy farming, and a prolific agricultural writer who wrote a well-received textbook on "Milch Cows" in the late 19th century.
Today the building has been almost entirely converted to office space for the university's Department of Hospitality and Tourism Management Archived 2011-10-03 at the Wayback Machine, however the former "dairy bar" has been repurposed as a restaurant known as Fletcher's Café, which is run by students of the hospitality program.
References
[edit]- ^ MAC Annual Report, March 1912, pp. 25-26.
- ^ Sargent, Porter E., ed. (1917). A Handbook of New England (2nd ed.). Boston: George H. Ellis Company. p. 342. Retrieved 3 August 2011.
- ^ Massachusetts; a guide to its places and people. Boston: Federal Writers' Project of the Works Progress Administration of Massachusetts. Riverside Press, Houghton Mifflin Company. 1937. p. 127. Retrieved 3 August 2011.