Bascom Hill Society Flipbook | Wisconsin Alumni Association
Bascom Hill Society Mission Statement
A commitment to excellence, support, and fellowship
Through the Bascom Hill Society, the University of Wisconsin Foundation honors major donors at the University of Wisconsin – Madison. The mission of the Society is to provide a framework for those alumni and friends whose generous support contributes to the university's standing as one of the most respected teaching and research institutions in the world. Donors welcomed into this distinguished group join in recognizing Wisconsin's widespread influence and value its ability to address the critical needs of society.
John Bascom was "among the prophets who from time to time have appeared to rejuvenate man and to arouse in him the invincible determination to live as to advance the human race toward the goal never attained and never attainable, of illimitable power, complete understanding, and spiritual perfection."
Charles Van Hise University of Wisconsin President 1904–1918
© Copyright University of Wisconsin Foundation, 2018
"University" or "Main" Hall was completed in 1860 as the third building of the University of Wisconsin – Madison. It created an architectural link between North and South Halls and a focal point at the end of State Street opposite the state Capitol. It did not become Bascom Hall until June 1920. Ironically, it also was not constructed under the watch of the university's sixth president, John Bascom, who served in the post from 1874 – 1887. Nonetheless, UW President Edward Birge renamed the university's stately yet welcoming structure Bascom Hall. John Bascom was a popular and respected teacher. A student of mathematics, theology, physicology, English literature, aesthetics, political economy, and agriculture, he believed that people of learning had a responsibility and obligation to lift the community to the highest possible ethical standards. Seniors were required to take his course on using their education to improve society.
During Bascom's presidency, a library, assembly hall, chapel, and the still-standing and still-functioning Science Hall joined North Hall, South Hall, and Main Hall to surround the hill's inviting lawn and help shape the campus.
Today, as the campus expands well beyond its original borders, Bascom Hill continues to serve as a gathering place and landmark. It is only appropriate, then, to have Bascom Hall serve as the inspiration and identification for the Bascom Hill Society, which proudly represents the mainstay of private support for the university.
Now known as Bascom Hill, College Hill (1851–1879) was chosen to be the most suitable location in Madison to establish the University of Wisconsin
Main Hall before a fire destroyed the dome and the building was renamed Bascom Hall 1860s
Graduates 1880s
Wheat field, Washburn Observatory, and Main Hall as seen from the current site of Agricultural Hall 1880s
Students on College Hill 1880s
Lower Campus, Science Hall, and houses along Langdon Street. This photograph was taken before the Wisconsin Historical Society was built in 1900.
"The University of Wisconsin will be permanently great in the degree in which it understands the conditions of the prosperity and peace of the people, and helps to provide them; in the degree in which it enters into the revelation of truth, the law of righteousness and the love of man..."
John Bascom University of Wisconsin President 1874–1887
Crew team and boathouse on Lake Mendota 1893
Washburn Observatory and West Campus 1894
First known photo of a University of Wisconsin band 1896
Horses, bicycles, and streetcar on tree-lined State Street as seen from Park Street. The Capitol is in the distance. May 1896
Basketball team 1897
Football players 1898
Chadbourne Hall was built in 1870 as the Normal School, then known as the Female College. After the adoption of coeducation in 1874, the building became the women's dormitory known as Ladies Hall. In 1901, the building was renamed in honor of the first University of Wisconsin President, Paul Chadbourne (1867–1870). The building was demolished in 1957.
Leila Bascom '02, daughter of UW Professor and administrator John Bascom, in her dorm room 1899
Main Hall 1899
Students and horses pose for a photo in front of the Horse Barn. Originally known as the Farm Barn, it is the oldest wooden structure on campus.
Class of 1901
The Engineer–Law School snow battle 1900s
Campus 1900s
The view from the Capitol 1900s
The original Camp Randall Stadium at Randall Avenue and University Avenue (current site of Engineering Campus). Monroe-Dudgeon and University Heights neighborhoods can be seen in the background.
1901
First class in Swiss cheese making at the Wisconsin Dairy School 1907
Abe Lincoln statue unveiling ceremony 1908
Bacteriology Lab in the School of Home Economics 1910
Camp Randall Stadium at West Dayton and Randall Avenue 1910
A student reads in his dorm room. His walls are decorated with old-fashioned pinups and Wisconsin memorabilia. 1912
Female graduates with Abe 1913
Daily Cardinal s taff 1914
Muir Knoll ski jump 1914
Muir Knoll ski jump 1914
Class photo 1915
May Fete 1915
1916
Birdseye view of campus by H.D. Nichols, published by W.T. Littig & Co., New York. Littig was known for panoramic views of college campuses. Nichols's signature with the date "1917" appears in the lower right corner. The Bascom Hall dome is visible in the illustration — though it burned October 10, 1916. It appears that this map was based on a 1907 version that shows only buildings such as Birge Hall (1912) and Wisconsin High School (1914) have been added. This would account for the presence of the lost dome.
King Hall, Hiram Smith Hall, Agricultural Hall, and Bascom Hall 1910s
In 1900, a decision was made to build a large vat, an above-ground cistern, below the dome of Main Hall rather than build a costly water tower. University officials had to ensure that enough water would be available on campus to fight a major fire. Made out of sheet iron, it was about 20 feet in diameter and 15 feet high, with a capacity of 40,000 gallons. On October 10, 1916, one of the most spectacular fires in Madison history started in the dome, with flames and smoke visible for miles. The dome was lost but there was little damage to the rest of the building. The wood structure of the dome burned fast but as the timbers and beams broke off, many of them fell into the large tank of water. Eventually the tank broke open and water spilled throughout the building preventing the fire from spreading.
This was the second dome on Bascom Hall. It was not replaced.
The cistern remains in Bascom Hall's attic along with the timbers that were charred but not ruined by the blaze. Through a locked door, up a ladder, you can look inside the tank.
History Class in Main Hall 1916
Ice Carnival on Lake Mendota 1916
Soldiers on the steps of Agricultural Hall 1917
Medical School class 1917
Electrical Engineering class 1917
Commencement ceremony on Bascom Hill 1917
Senior Swingout at Chadbourne Hall 1918
Women's Mechanics class 1918
Lake Mendota ice rink 1919
Class Rush on Library Mall 1919
Several dozen students carrying billy clubs pose for a group photo during the initiation ritual of Class Rush. 1919
Diving competition on Lake Mendota. The boathouse can be seen at far right.
1919
Sheep grazing on the Ag campus 1919
Chadbourne Hall residents in costume May 7, 1920
Chadbourne Hall 1920s
A crowd of people in the Red Gym watch the Wisconsin vs. Michigan football game by Gridograph. The device depicted the progress of the game using lights on a large grid.
November 18, 1922
Three female students dance by Lake Mendota. 1920s
UW – Madison campus and surrounding neighborhood 1920s
The new Camp Randall Stadium 1920s
Veterinary School Short Course January 30, 1923
Earle M. Terry, professor of physics and founder of WHA, working in the lab.
November 11, 1924
A proposal for future campus development from Arthur Peabody Architects 1926
The Field House under construction 1929
Camp Randall and the Field House 1930s
Winter sports on Observatory Hill 1930
Men's Hockey Team 1932
Radio operators 1935
Records office 1930s
Winter sports 1936
Women's gym class at Armory 1936
Home Economics class 1939
Engineering students Homecoming parade float 1939
Homecoming bonfire 1940
UW Marching Band at Camp Randall 1940
The Terrace 1940s
The Terrace lawn and lakeshore 1940s
Bowling in PE class 1940s
Rathskeller lunch counter 1940s
Bascom Hill 1940s
Fauerbach Beer delivery to Memorial Union 1941
Football Saturday at Camp Randall 1940s
Medical Sciences Campus and School of Human Ecology 1940s
To accommodate the UW's growing student body, the university moved twenty-six temporary buildings to campus. The structures were surplus from Fort McCoy and other military bases, where they were used during World War II. 1940s
Muir Knoll ski jump 1940s
Navy ROTC students attend Naval Code School in the Field House during World War II. 1942
Women in code class during World War II 1942
Two military trainees say goodbye to female friends in front of a wall on which is painted the message: "Cheer up, gals! We'll be back! Your V-12 grads."
1942 – 45
ROTC student cadets and friends at the Rathskeller 1942 – 45
Homecoming pep rally November 8, 1946
Homecoming bonfire November 8, 1946
Campus aerial 1946
State Street 1940s
Fifteen Quonset huts, most of them on Library Mall, housed classrooms and labs to meet the enrollment demand of veterans returning from World War II.
Temporary housing after World War II 1948
Hoofers Clubhouse 1947
Students outside Ag Hall 1940s
Bus stop outside Memorial Union 1948
Lake Mendota shoreline near Memorial Union and the Union Theater
1949
Bill Sagal, the first human Bucky Badger mascot, at a University of Wisconsin – Madison football game. Bucky was first introduced at a pep rally on Friday, November 11, 1949, before the next day's Homecoming game against Iowa (Wisconsin 35, Iowa 13). Bucky was officially named Buckingham U. Badger, a name suggested by Bill Sachse, chair of the Pep Committee. Carolyn (Connie) Conrad, a UW art student, designed the original chicken wire and papier-mâché head. Sagal, then head cheerleader, wore his regular cheerleader trousers and sweater and added boxing gloves.
1949
One of Homecoming’s biggest spectacles doesn’t involve the marching band or the football team. It’s hundreds of third-year law students with canes charging down the field toward Camp Randall Stadium’s south end zone before kickoff. Some of the future attorneys sprint like running backs going for a touchdown. Others stroll or strut, swinging their canes, to savor the moment and avoid the crush. When they arrive in the shadow of the Field House, students toss their canes over the goalpost. It’s a decades- long tradition that holds that catching their canes means they’ll win their first cases after graduation.
1949
Law School building 1950s
English class lecture in Music Hall 1949
Solar Observatory and Washburn Observatory 1949
Memorial Union Terrace vendor 1949
Edgar "Pop" Gordon leading a "Wisconsin Spirit of Song" concert being aired over WHA radio 1950s
Memorial Union Terrace 1950s
Memorial Union Terrace and Lakeshore 1950s
Dancing on the Terrace 1950s
Studying in the library at the Service Memorial Institute of the Medical School 1950s
Roasting marshmallows at the Rathskeller 1950s
Memorial Union Terrace 1950s
Concert on the Union Theater steps 1950s
Memorial Union barber shop 1950s
Dorm life 1950s
Looking through the card catalog 1950s
Student life 1953
Football Saturday 1950s
Bucky Badger and the band 1950s
Park Street 1955
State Street 1955
Staff of the Octopus or "The Octy" — a campus humor publication from the early 20th century. 1955
Rathskeller lunch counter 1950s
1956
Early women cheerleaders 1956
According to the 1957 Badger yearbook, the first women cheerleaders appeared on Dad's Day, October 20, 1956 (Wisconsin 6, Purdue 6). A letter from former cheerleaders, however, states that officially sanctioned women cheerleaders first appeared on campus in the fall of 1952 (four women had done a routine at Homecoming 1951, but they were not official cheerleaders). Coed cheerleaders were abolished in the spring of 1954 and then reintroduced in 1956.
College of Engineering Professor Allan Scidmore and Professor Charles Davidson examine the Wisconsin Integrally Synchronized Computer December 23, 1957
Registration staff and students crowd the registrar's office in Bascom Hall 1960
John F. Kennedy speaking at the Field House October 23, 1960
The Terrace 1960
Students fill a lecture hall for an Advanced Shakespeare class. 1960
Shoot House residents 1961
Bucky Badger, a camel, and the Shriners 1960s
UW Marching Band Tournament of Roses Parade
1963
Studying in the stacks 1960s
Single dorm room 1960s
Crowded lecture in Bascom Hall 1961
John F. Kennedy memorial gathering on Bascom Hill November 1963
Electrical engineering computer 1963
Turbo Pneumatic Control Center 1964
Game Day in the press box at Camp Randall October 29, 1966
Pedestrian bridge spanning Park Street between Science Hall and the Memorial Union
1966
Mike Leckrone, Director of the Marching Band and Director of Bands at the University of Wisconsin, leads the Bucky Wagon into game day at Camp Randall 1970
Crowded Library Mall 1970s
Student registration in the Red Gym 1971
Watching TV in a residence hall 1970s
Chadbourne Hall double dorm room 1970s
Chadbourne Hall triple dorm room 1970s
Registration line at the Stock Pavilion 1977
Spirit squad on the Bucky Wagon 1978
University Hospital and Clinics under construction 1973 – 1979
University Hospital and Clinics 1979
Student protests 1970s
Single dorm room 1970s
The Terrace 1970s
The Statue of Liberty on Lake Mendota was built in February 1979 by the Pail and Shovel Party, which had gained control of the Wisconsin Student Association by the spring of 1978.
February 1979
The Pail and Shovel party holds a "funeral" for the Statue of Liberty on Lake Mendota. To the right of the monument, by the wreath, are Pail and Shovel Vice President Jim Mallon, left, and President Leon Varjian, right. The original statue was torched by an unknown arsonist ten days after it had been constructed. A new, improved statue was erected in February of 1980. That statue was rescued from a barn near Richland Center in the mid 1990s, and Hoofers helped restore it and used it in their Winter Carnival in 1996. The statue currently belongs to Dane County.
Flamingos on Bascom 1979
On the first day of classes, September 4, 1979, Madison students awoke to find that more than 1,000 pink flamingos covered the University's Bascom Hill, courtesy of the Pail and Shovel party.
Lady Liberty on Lake Mendota 1980
Commencement at Camp Randall Stadium 1970s
Toga Party 1979
Teaching Assistants Association strike 1980
Mike Leckrone 1981
Pumpkin picking on Bascom Hill 1982
A UW cheerleader and Elroy "Crazylegs" Hirsch dance to the Beer Barrel Polka 1982
UW Marching Band calisthenics on practice field 1982
Memorial Union cafeteria 1982
Sled race on Lake Mendota during Hoofer's Winter Carnival 1984
Wisconsin Student Association co-president, Brian Fielkow '86, poses with actor Rodney Dangerfield during filming of Back to School . September 1985
The Terrace 1987
Bucky Badger Homecoming float
1987
Allen Centennial Garden 1989
Dorm life 1991
MTV filming for Hot Seat at Memorial Union Terrace with members of the bands Nelson and Cinderella 1991
School of Business computer lab 1993
Barry Alvarez and team members run onto the field at the Rose Bowl. Wisconsin defeated UCLA 21 – 16. 1994
Library Mall, food carts, and State Street 1995
Park Street overpass in winter 1990s
Kites on Ice 1990s
Broom ball on Lake Mendota 1990s
Sledding on Observatory Hill 1990s
Kohl Center 1998
First basketball game at the Kohl Center 1998
Memorial Union Terrace 1990s
Football Saturday on the Campus Drive footbridge 1998
Fifth Quarter in the student section at Camp Randall 2003
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