It seemed like a strange name for a
fraternity. The Emerson Literary Society -- were they kidding? The house had a
dining room, a piano and a library, and it sounded like a place where you'd go
for tea and sympathy, not to share a friendly beer with your pals. The name
wasn't even Greek, but came from an American poet, of all people, who famously
wrote, "Whoso would be man must be a nonconformist" -- an odd mantra for a
fraternity, an organization usually predicated on the idea that its members
share common activities, interests and values.
But ELS was about nonconformity.
Its house was the home of the non-fraternity fraternity, for people who either
weren't accustomed to having brothers or already had enough of them at home.
Its members were individualists who lived on a diet of decent food and lively
conversation. The building's ground floor social rooms were big enough, but not
too big, for discussion and debate. On occasion, they also were host to more
visceral forms of fun in which tea, it must be admitted, played a very limited
role. But students in the humanities and the arts found the place highly
sympathetic; some hung around even though they weren't members, and even though
(starting in the late '60s) they were women.
Faculty members were always welcome
in the house and happily accepted the invitations of their students to attend
cocktail parties, banquets and just plain ordinary lunches and dinners. Even
when teachers weren't there, they were present. In the dining room a cluster of
English majors, lingering long after dessert had been served, might be
grappling with topics of current interest: a Henry James novel, a tale by Hawthorne or the
eccentricities of their professor.
On a campus largely known for its
civility, the ELS house was about the most civilized place around, where
students and teachers could get together in relaxed circumstances to learn
from, and about, each other. It was also a great place to come in and warm up
over a cup of coffee, no matter which side of the campus you were coming from.
And so it will be again -- all these things -- in a new life made possible by
gifts to the Excelsior Campaign.
An Extended Village for the College
Community
As a small, residential college, Hamilton has advantages
that larger, more impersonal institutions cannot match. In larger places,
meaningful relationships between their students' academic and residential lives
are much more difficult to achieve. At Hamilton,
by contrast, we are constantly working to integrate the College's residential
environment with its academic mission. That work will be furthered considerably
by the expansion and renovation of the ELS house.
The Beinecke Village,
built in 1993, was, to date, the most important step in this direction. It put
the Mail Center,
diner, events barn and student lounges in a location accessible to both the old
Hamilton campus and the newer Kirkland side. The Little Pub and the Annex
were then created to provide more spaces for social interaction and events,
student meetings and other group functions. Even more recently, the new
residence halls made from former fraternity houses have increased the quality
and variety of student living spaces. And Martin's Way, the path between the
campuses, has successfully served to tie the whole community closer together.
Despite these improved residential
and social spaces, many Hamilton
students continue to lead academic and residential lives that are highly
compartmentalized. They are reluctant to mix their intellectual and social
activities and find neither the encouragement nor the incentive to do so in the
spaces now available to them.
The ELS house, centrally located
near Beinecke, offers an ideal opportunity to extend the capacity of our
student village and create a place where students and faculty members can come
together outside of (but close to) the classroom to discuss their work in a
relaxed atmosphere and enjoy each other's company outside the formalities of
classroom protocol.
A New and Expanded ELS
While retaining much of the look
and charm of the old ELS house, the College plans to expand the building's
footprint by adding a new structure to the south -- closer to Beinecke -- of
approximately the same size as the original.
The old and new sections will be
connected by a glass atrium containing a coffeehouse designed to serve the
College community at large. The café will be fronted alongside Martin's Way,
making it readily accessible to everyone making the trip between the north and
south campuses. We expect it to be a casual and convenient meeting place for
students and teachers, and as such, an extension of the classroom "disguised"
as a social space.
The elegant ground floor of the old
ELS house will become a lounge where beverage sippers with a little time to
spare can relax, chat or just come in from out of the cold. The café and lounge
will be open all day and into the night, when they can also be used for social
gatherings, small-group musical performances or other alcohol-free entertainment
events.
The original building's upper
floors will be reconfigured to provide much-needed offices and meeting spaces
for student clubs, associations and organizations, of which there are more than
100 on campus. When not in use for meetings, these spaces will also serve as
hideaways for students who want to catch up on their reading or get some work
done between classes.
The ELS house will thus become a
place where a diverse range of people can share their common interests and
enthusiasms, in everything from chess to Japanese animé. Administrative and
judicial bodies for the student population will convene there, as will other
groups charged with bringing entertainment to the Hill, organizing special
events and publishing student media. The Womyn's Community Center, which raises
awareness of women's issues on campus, may be one of the new tenants -- another
appropriate nod to ELS's history; it was the first Hamilton fraternity to accept female
students.
The presence of all these
organizations will guarantee an almost constant flow of people in and out of
the building. Each day, a larger and more diverse mix of students will converge
in this space than anywhere else on campus.
The new building to the south of
the original ELS house will contain offices for the Dean of Students, the
Registrar, the Higher Education Opportunity Program and other functions.
The project to expand and renovate
the ELS house will be coordinated with changes at Beinecke and the Bristol Center to make the best and most efficient
use of all the community spaces on campus. New study areas will be created on
the third floor of Bristol.
The College radio station will be moved from Bristol to Beinecke, possibly at the juncture
of Martin's Way, making it a more visible presence on campus. Over the
fireplace lounge in Beinecke a floor will be added to create another space for
student organizations. The lounge itself will become a reservable social space
for small gatherings. The new ELS complex will also contain a meeting room for
the Student Assembly -- and other student groups -- a contemporary variation on
the trustee room upstairs in Buttrick Hall.
As funds come in for the further
development of these projects, some of the details may change, but the main
purpose will remain the same: to provide a variety of extracurricular places in
which students can continue the four-year conversation, among themselves and
their teachers, that constitutes a Hamilton education.
For the expansion and renovation of
ELS and related facilities, the Excelsior Campaign plans to raise $5 million.
I love this place so much. Looking
back over the past few years, I've had a fantastic experience. Wonderful
friends, brilliant professors, great times -- I'm really grateful for all that
and want to give something back to Hamilton.
I want future students to have the same advantages I've had -- and that's where
the senior gift comes in. It makes a difference in the quality of student life.
Our class voted overwhelmingly to
donate our senior gift to the remodeling of the ELS House -- specifically toward
renovating the front of the building. We asked each member of the Class of 2005
to give $20.05 and ended up raising more than $17,000 with the help of parents,
friends and trustees.
Some seniors don't participate in
the senior gift, but donate to the Annual Fund instead. Either way, the value
of working on the senior gift campaign is that, while you're young, it shows
you the importance of philanthropy. If you're fortunate, you should give back
to society. Hamilton
has one of the highest rates of giving in the nation. It's a testament to how
great our College is, and I want that to continue.
Ginny Smith, co-chair of the Senior
Gift Committee
We think ELS will become the College's
family room, an accessible, comfortable place where students, faculty members
and College employees can go to grab a cup of coffee, put their feet up and
hang out together. Late at night and on weekends, there'll be nice social
options for students, without alcohol. It's an ideal, central spot, adjacent to
Martin's Way, close to the Mail Center and complementary to Beinecke Village.
Ever since the College bought the ELS house in March 2000, people on campus
have been talking about how to use this attractive space. We want to keep the
nice feel of the ground-floor rooms and make it a place no one will want to
leave.
Nancy Thompson, Dean of Students
Plans for ELS
Creating a new social space with a coffeehouse and student organization offices.
Adding a building that will double the size of the existing ELS house.
Relocating the offices for the Dean of Students and the Registrar from KJ.