Wheeler Hall
Wheeler Hall | |
Location | Berkeley, California |
---|---|
Coordinates | 37°52′15.7″N 122°15′32.6″W / 37.871028°N 122.259056°W |
NRHP reference No. | 82004654 |
BERKL No. | 163 |
Significant dates | |
Added to NRHP | March 25, 1982 |
Designated BERKL | January 13, 1986[1] |
Wheeler Hall is a building on the campus of the University of California, Berkeley in Berkeley, California in the Classical Revival style. Home to the English department as well as the university's College Writing Programs department, it was named for the philologist and university president Benjamin Ide Wheeler.
The building was opened in 1917.[2] It houses the largest lecture hall on the Berkeley campus, Wheeler Auditorium.
On February 29, 1940, UC Berkeley professor Ernest O. Lawrence received the Nobel Prize in Physics in Wheeler Auditorium from Carl Wallerstedt, Consul General of Sweden, due to the danger of crossing the Atlantic during World War II. The building was the site of many of the Free Speech Movement protests in the 1960s and is a focal point of the Berkeley campus. In the 2010s, it has been the site of many university protests and several building takeovers.
Footnotes[edit]
- ^ "Berkeley Landmarks". Berkeley Architectural Heritage Association. Retrieved 2013-03-04.
- ^ University of California chronicle. Vol. XIX. University of California Press. 1917. p. 75.
External links[edit]
- School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in California
- Buildings and structures in Berkeley, California
- University of California, Berkeley buildings
- University and college academic buildings in the United States
- Neoclassical architecture in California
- 1917 establishments in California
- History of Berkeley, California
- National Register of Historic Places in Berkeley, California
- Berkeley Landmarks in Berkeley, California
- Alameda County, California building and structure stubs
- San Francisco Bay Area Registered Historic Place stubs
- Alameda County, California geography stubs