James H. Wilson Hall

http://dbpedia.org/resource/James_H._Wilson_Hall an entity of type: Thing

James H. Wilson Hall (formerly known as the Councill Domestic Science Building) is a historic building on the campus of Alabama A&M University in Huntsville, Alabama. Construction began in 1911, and was completed in 1912.State Black Archives The funds were a gift from the Robert R. McCormick family. It served as the university's home economics building until 1968, when it was partly taken over by the art department until 1970. It was vacant until 1990, when the building was restored and taken over by the State Black Archives Research Center and Museum, which was established in 1987.State Black Archives rdf:langString
rdf:langString James H. Wilson Hall
rdf:langString Domestic Science Building
rdf:langString Domestic Science Building
xsd:float 34.7852783203125
xsd:float -86.56916809082031
xsd:integer 43053841
xsd:integer 1094184051
xsd:date 1973-04-11
rdf:langString Classical
rdf:langString less than one acre
rdf:langString The building in December 2010
xsd:date 2001-12-31
rdf:langString Alabama A&M University campus, Huntsville, Alabama
rdf:langString USA Alabama Huntsville#Alabama#USA
rdf:langString yes
rdf:langString cp
xsd:integer 1001407
xsd:integer 73000358
xsd:string 34.78527777777778 -86.56916666666666
rdf:langString James H. Wilson Hall (formerly known as the Councill Domestic Science Building) is a historic building on the campus of Alabama A&M University in Huntsville, Alabama. Construction began in 1911, and was completed in 1912.State Black Archives The funds were a gift from the Robert R. McCormick family. It served as the university's home economics building until 1968, when it was partly taken over by the art department until 1970. It was vacant until 1990, when the building was restored and taken over by the State Black Archives Research Center and Museum, which was established in 1987.State Black Archives The center portion of the building is three stories, with a gable roof running front-to-back. The main entrance is inside an enclosed lobby of white painted brick which features three windowed arches on the front and arches with glass doors on either side. Above the lobby is a two-story pedimented portico, supported by four Ionic columns, with a third-floor balcony. On either side of the main block, set back from the portico, are 2 four-bay, two-story wings. Windows on the first floor façade are six-over-six sashes, while the second and third floors are nine-over-nine. The roof is covered in red tile with a decorative finial on the gable ends. The cornice is decorated with small dentils on the wings, and larger ones on the architrave. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4480
xsd:string 73000358
<Geometry> POINT(-86.56916809082 34.785278320312)

data from the linked data cloud