TERRE HAUTE — During 1908 and 1909, contractors guided by administrators at Indiana State Normal School were constructing one of the most modern libraries in the state.
Combining safety with beauty, that library — the only remaining edifice built during the Normal School era (1867-1929) — was a product of five fundamental concepts: safety, storage capacity, comfort, convenience and architectural beauty. Safety was paramount: the building had to be fireproof. The administration had learned an important lesson on April 9, 1888, when the first college building erupted into flames and was totally destroyed. No one was injured but more than 5,000 books were lost. By the time Normal Library was finished, librarian Arthur Cunningham — its principal champion — proudly reported that it would contain about 100,000 volumes.
Safety also meant that the building would be structurally sound. The foundation was capable of supporting 20 stories, if necessary. Concrete used was apportioned one part cement to four parts sand and gravel, far superior to that used in most construction
Very little wood was used. The building consisted primarily of Bedford stone, vitrified brick, concrete and steel. One limestone block weighing seven tons was too large and had to be cut, reducing the largest piece to five tons. The roof was made of concrete five inches thick. The only lumber in the building was found in window sills, doors and door frames.
James F. Alexander of Lafayette was the architect. Terre Haute contractor August Ohm was the general contractor. Robert Greene Gillum, professor of physics at Indiana State Normal, was superintendent of construction.
The architectural beauty of the Italian Renaissance structure with Ionic pilasters — largely modeled after the Chicago Public Library, an 1897 edifice considered among the most attractive buildings in the U.S. — was not sacrificed.
The building’s dome of decorative art glass 20 feet in diameter was supported by columns which give a circular appearance to the room below.
Book stacks of cast iron construction were five feet high. The main stack was separated from the main reading room by a series of columns, on each side of which were small rooms for maps and pamphlets. Marble stairways led from the main floor to the basement and the upper floor.
The information desk was placed in the center of the rotunda flanked by book stacks on the east and west sides. Mezzanine floors containing similar stacks were accessible by spiral stairways at one end and regular stairways at the other.
The front of the second floor included an art reference room and a public documents room. Four small study rooms occupied the sides. An art gallery was planned for the corridor surrounding the rotunda.
A children’s reading room and a reference library were placed in the basement. A state-of-the-art Paul steam vacuum system was used to heat the building. The contract for the construction of the building was let on Aug. 7, 1907. Though scheduled to open in early 1909, it was not finished until December and was dedicated with much pomp and circumstance during Anniversary Week: June 19-23, 1910.
Anniversary Week included several events. The first commencement of Normal Training High School was staged on June 20. Dr. Robert Judson Aley, state superintendent of public instruction, gave the principal address that evening. The Breinig Orchestra and Ione Hazeldine provided music.
New Parsons Field, the anticipated site of field games such as baseball and football, and Normal Library were dedicated on June 21. Cunningham, State Librarian Demarchus C. Brown of Indianapolis and William H. Armstrong, president of the Normal School board of trustees, made presentations.
Dr. William Wood Parsons, the third president of State Normal who was commemorating his 25th year of service, declared Normal Library to be “the handsomest building in the state devoted to library purposes and is a durable and magnificent monument to our great system of common schools.”
The original construction appropriation was $99,970. The ultimate cost hovered around $150,000. The extra money was secured from the library and maintenance funds.
The dome, which shed soft light over the reading room, included an oil reproduction of Raphael’s figure symbolizing philosophy, encompassing all liberal arts and sciences. In its lower tier there were inscriptions promoting education taken from the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, the State of Indiana Constitution of 1816, the second state Constitution (1851) and the 1865 Indiana statute which created State Normal School. Below Raphael’s figure were 24 wreathed medallions pierced by flaming torches, each identified with names of noted philosophers and educators from Sophocles to present times, including six Indiana products. Among those honored was President Parsons.
Parsons enrolled at State Normal School when the doors first opened on Jan. 6, 1870. The 40th anniversary of the college was recognized on Jan. 6, 1910 but celebrated extensively during Anniversary Week.
Indiana Gov. Thomas Riley Marshall; Livingston C. Lord, president of Eastern Illinois Normal; Dr. Charles Hubbard Judd of the University of Chicago; Dr. Winthrop E. Stone, president of Purdue University; Superintendent of Muncie Schools Ben Moore; and Dr. Barton Warren Evermann of the U.S. Fish Commission and professor of biology at Indiana State Normal from 1886 to 1891, were present to honor Parsons and the college.
Howard Sandison, vice president of State Normal and a college classmate of Dr. Parsons, and Bishop Evans Holt Hughes, also honored Parsons and the graduating seniors. When Normal Library was remodeled in the late 1950s, Miller and Yeager of Terre Haute were the architects. Unfortunately, the dome could not be restored though sections of it have been placed in storage.
Placed on the National and Indiana Registers of Historic Places in 2002, Normal Library — antiquated but seemingly indestructible — is the proud symbol of a fabled collegiate heritage conceived in 1865 and born in 1870.
History
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: Normal Library is indestructible symbol of college heritage
- History
-
-
LOOKING BACK: 1962: Terre Haute Works of Allis-Chalmers closes
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
-
GENEALOGY: BMD website great for tracing England, Wales
If you have ancestors who trace back to England or Wales within the past 175 years, then the Free BMD website at RootsWeb, at freebmd.rootsweb.com/, is the place to visit.
-
HISTORICAL TREASURE: WBOW introduced some fine Valley talent
When it first began broadcasting in 1927, station WRPI (Rose Polytechnic Institute) focused on educational programing.
-
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: Inventor John B. Deeds and highwayman William G. Murray
Among the many unsolved local history mysteries is the fate of master machinist and inventor John B. Deeds.
-
BRUCE'S HISTORY LESSON: This little-known compromise may have saved the union
When the Constitution was signed in September of 1787 and sent to the Congress that then existed under the Articles of Confederation, Congress was instructed to send that Constitution to the states to be ratified … or not. The message to the states was clear: Accept the Constitution or reject it, but don’t try to change it.
-
Traveling Civil War exhibit makes history personal
Civil War history will come alive for visitors to the Sullivan County Public Library who experience “Faces of the Civil War,” a traveling exhibition created and managed by the Indiana Historical Society.
-
GENEALOGY: Virginia Historical Society takes on ambitious project
Over the past few months, the Virginia Historical Society has launched an ambitious project to scrutinize more than 8 million 17th, 18th, and 19th century documents in order to identify the enslaved population of those times.
-
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: The Legacy of ‘The Old Silkworm House’
In 1837, and for several years thereafter, a gray sandstone obelisk was installed next to a one-story frame residence at the northwest corner of Sixth and Eagle streets.
-
HISTORICAL TREASURE: A blast from valentines past
Valentine’s Day — it brings to mind simple paper valentines and the elaborate, fancy store-bought cards with multiple verses and glittery covers.
-
LOOKING BACK: 1962: Flu outbreak forces Schulte closed
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
-
Original copy of 13th Amendment at Lincoln Library & Museum
A fully signed and recently restored copy of the Congressional resolution for a 13th Amendment to the Constitution, the official act that would abolish slavery in the United States, will be on display in the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library & Museum’s Treasures Gallery.
-
BRUCE'S HISTORY LESSON: Freedom of religion — beliefs and actions
Because religious faith is, arguably, the quintessential example of our right to privacy, to say nothing of its prominent place in our First Amendment, throughout our history court cases involving the free exercise of religion have been handled with great trepidation and with particular care. One of the milestone “free exercise” religion cases, Davis v. Beason, was decided by the Supreme Court this week (Feb. 3) in 1890.
-
GENEALOGY: SoCal Genealogical Jamboree coming up in June
The Southern California Genealogical Society announces its 43rd Annual Jamboree, to be staged for three days on June 8-10, at the Los Angeles Marriott Burbank Airport Hotel in Burbank, Calif.
-
LOOKING BACK: 2002: Disco Ernie featured on Maury
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
-
HISTORICAL TREASURE: Flashing the mayor's badge
This mayoral badge was presented to the Vigo County Historical Society by Elizabeth K. Schultz, the granddaughter of Samuel E. Beecher Sr., who served as mayor of Terre Haute from 1936 to 1940.
-
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: Deadly tornado devastates York in 1907
John T. Staff loved water and, particularly, the Wabash River.
-
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: Notorious Western desperado Ellsworth Wyatt captured in Clay County
In October 1892, Terre Haute police received a circular from the State of Kansas containing a description of Ellsworth Wyatt and offering a $1,200 reward for his capture.
-
LOOKING BACK: 2002: ISU students honor Martin Luther King Jr.
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
-
HISTORICAL TREASURE: News letter filled with wonderful local news
We recently received five bound volumes of copies of the “Terre Haute Onizette,” the Owen-Illinois Glass Company news letter for the Terre Haute Plant.
-
GENEALOGY: Peyton, Downey, Fifer queries and a plea for help from Scotland
This week, we have several queries.
-
Extension plans seminar on land use
The Purdue Extension Land Use Team is hosting a video seminar titled “Welcome to the Plan Commission and Board of Zoning Appeals” from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday.
-
BRUCE'S HISTORY LESSON: Kennedy, Camelot, and other myths
This week (Jan. 20) in 1961, John F. Kennedy was inaugurated as our 35th president, and his tragic death by assassination notwithstanding, his was a mediocre presidency that, undeservedly, became the stuff of legend — in part because of his assassination.
-
Actor to portray Lincoln at dinner for historical society
A special program, “And Lincoln Wrote,” is coming to Harlan Hall in Marshall, Ill., with a featured presentation by Dick Benach as Abraham Lincoln and Chuck Hand as the publisher of the Prairie Beacon.
-
GENEALOGY: Celebrate MLK Day with the Indiana Historical Society
On Monday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., the Indiana Historical Society will offer free admission to celebrate Martin Luther King Day.
-
HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE: Light Guards savor military and social experiences
Never during the Civil War was there a time when the City of Terre Haute was in danger of hosting an armed conflict involving one or more armies.
-
LOOKING BACK: 1962: 87 high school hoops teams compete in 47th annual Wabash Valley Tournament
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
-
HISTORICAL TREASURE: A bottle of clove oil at the pharmacy
The Historical Treasure for today is a bottle of Clove Oil.
-
LOOKING BACK: 1987: St. Mary’s Parish congregation celebrates 150th anniversary
Dorothy Jerse looks back at local history from 10, 25 and 50 years ago as reported in the Tribune and Tribune-Star.
-
HISTORICAL TREASURE: Fire up the jukebox for a great night
The jukebox existed long before Glenn Miller’s “Juke Box Saturday Night” swing version.
-
GENEALOGY: 1752 is one memorable year for genealogists
The year 1752 is one to remember if you have ancestors who lived in areas controlled by Great Britain; and this includes the American colonies.
- More History Headlines
-
LOOKING BACK: 1962: Terre Haute Works of Allis-Chalmers closes








