A glimpse of the College鈥檚 nineteenth-century centerpiece

Construction for 欧美AV鈥檚 new geothermal energy project led to discoveries from the College鈥檚 beginnings.

In late June, Karla Youngblood FP鈥99 got a phone call she鈥檇 been hoping to receive. The contractor overseeing work for the campus鈥檚 newly launched geothermal energy project had some news. Workers discovered part of an historic brick foundation wall five feet below ground level while digging a large trench about 60 feet from the entrance to Abbey Memorial Chapel.

Youngblood, the College鈥檚 associate vice president for facilities management, instantly knew what it was. Before excavation work started, she had been alerted by colleagues at the that the foundation of the College鈥檚 original building 鈥 the massive Seminary Building dating back to 欧美AV鈥檚 founding year of 1837 鈥 could soon see the light of day.

Upon close inspection of the discovery, Youngblood realized she was looking at firebricks. Less porous than common bricks, firebricks are exceptionally heat resistant and still used to line fireplaces, furnaces and boiler rooms. 鈥淭hey look exactly the same,鈥 she said. 鈥淚n fact, we have similar firebricks in the campus鈥檚 gas-fired boiler rooms today.鈥

But on the tragic day of September 27, 1896, when a fire broke out in the Seminary Building, coal was king. The massive four-story structure, where 欧美AV students spent almost all of their time 鈥 sleeping, eating, studying and exercising 鈥 was heated by a coal-fired steam boiler system. Geothermal project workers, gingerly digging with hand tools to avoid disturbing the brickwork, discovered the base of the coal-burning boiler room at the rear southeastern corner of the Seminary Building. Its grand facade, featuring a two-story piazza, stood over College Street roughly between where the Williston Library and chapel buildings stand today.

The fire completely destroyed the Seminary Building, leaving nothing standing but shards of exterior brick walls. Miraculously, no one was injured or killed 鈥 but overnight, the heart of the College鈥檚 campus had almost vanished.

From seminary to (carbon-neutral) college

Forget about today鈥檚 campus spread across more than 700 acres for a moment. Imagine instead one rectangular brick building, 94-feet wide and 50-feet deep, looming over young elm trees and neighboring houses in the small village of South Hadley. This was the scene in 1837, when the first students arrived in November. The Seminary Building essentially was the institution, then called . (In the nineteenth century, the word 鈥渟eminary鈥 didn鈥檛 have today鈥檚 strong theological connotations; it could be used to describe college preparatory, college-level, graduate or professional training schools.)

鈥淭he building served all purposes,鈥 said , 欧美AV鈥檚 head of Archives and Special Collections. It featured a dormitory, teachers鈥 residence, laundry room, classrooms, gymnasium, business office, elevator, dining hall and kitchen (in the basement) and power plant. Founder Mary Lyon and her successors, along with all students, lived in the building. 鈥淚t grew and developed as the seminary grew and changed,鈥 Richards said.

By 1896, when tragedy struck, a succession of additions (including the coal power plant built in 1865) turned the initial rectangular building into a much larger squarish structure enclosing a four-sided courtyard.

鈥淚t was a highly structured, very close-knit community of students and their teachers,鈥 Richards said. Students helped with cooking and cleaning their rooms. There was no housekeeping staff. 鈥淚t was very much a community of young women living with their female teachers.鈥

Although the fire was devastating, the school 鈥 which in 1893 changed its name to 欧美AV 鈥 did not close for rebuilding. Instead, local residents housed students, and classes were held in the library building, which firefighters managed to save.

鈥淲e learned 鈥 that all the townspeople were our friends,鈥 President wrote in a report to College trustees. 鈥淭hey opened their doors to the homeless, and 鈥 every student was provided with shelter for the night.鈥

What emerged from the ashes of disaster was a commitment to build a new and stronger College through a newly envisioned campus. 鈥淚t was a fresh start for the College to reimagine how it wanted to be a college,鈥 Richards said. 鈥淭hey had the opportunity to rethink what campus could be.鈥

In the months and years following the fire, land was acquired, and a new landscape began taking shape, with separate buildings for dormitories, administration, a gymnasium and classes. A modern campus was born.

Yet even as dramatic changes transformed the campus between 1896 and 2023, portions of the Seminary foundation sat undisturbed just a few feet underground. (Contract workers also found common bricks, a few small glass bottles and pieces of pottery.) A few of the bricks discovered in June will be permanently preserved by Richard鈥檚 Archives and Special Collections team.

鈥淏eing able to hold something substantial from the actual building 鈥 it鈥檚 very exciting,鈥 Richards said.

Newly discovered bricks have also been presented to President Danielle R. Holley, tangibly connecting the newly inaugurated leader to the College鈥檚 earliest days. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 pretty special,鈥 Youngblood said.

Also noteworthy, she added, is the fact that part of campus鈥檚 original fossil fuel鈥揵urning infrastructure was found while laying the groundwork for 鈥渟tate-of-the-art heating technology.鈥 The multiphase geothermal energy project, which began this year and is scheduled to be completed in 2030, is a top priority of President Holley鈥檚 and a key step toward becoming carbon neutral by 2037, the College鈥檚 bicentennial.

鈥淭he campus continues to evolve,鈥 said Youngblood, noting that the discovery of the firebricks and other artifacts hasn鈥檛 affected the geothermal project鈥檚 schedule.

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