“The new Chapel is too large a subject to be treated of in as short a
manner as would be necessary if undertaken here…. Suffice it to say
that it is a source of great rejoicing to see such a fine structure
really making its appearance where it is so greatly needed and where it
will be so thoroughly appreciated. …The chapel building will furthermore
be an honor to the place, and we hope that the end has come to the
erection of cheap buildings on the College grounds, and that in future
all may be substantial structures worthy of the State which builds
them.”
On a nondescript Wednesday in late October, someone rang
Old Aggie for the first time in a year, her voice belting out across the
University of Massachusetts Amherst in a pleasant baritone. The ringer
swung her joyously, if irregularly, and for so long that students
started to wonder who had died that was so important as to have two
minutes of a bell pealing in their honor in the middle of classes. At
last she quieted and grew still. The 42-bell carillon hung silent next
to her, verdigris creeping over the copper. I have never heard the
carillon ring; no one bothered to play it that day either.
The
bell tower’s usual silence pervades the rest of the building, sweeping
down the iron ladder and narrow stairwell to the top-floor auditorium
where it languishes in the rafters of the impressive vaulted ceiling.
Time clings to the walls and pulls at the light blue plaster, sending
flakes skittering down the main stairwell to the ground floor. The
chapel’s grey granite exterior trimmed in red ocher sandstone is a solid
and elegantly convincing facade for the forgotten rooms within.
I
have passed this dying giant nearly every day for three-and-a-half
years, and I have never known its purpose. At the campus store it
features on postcards, mugs, holiday cards, and University stationary –
the veritable emblem of UMass – but the building itself remains unused,
an empty symbol. This year for Homecoming, the University offered tours
through the building – hence the enthusiastic ringer – welcoming back
not only its alumni, but also its lost heritage. I could not miss the
opportunity to enter the building that has been silent for too long.
I
step through the front door with a tour group of about 20, stirring up
the 15 years of disuse that has settled on the floor and windowsills in
slender white strands and fluffy grey motes. The tour guide brings us up
the wide ash stairs to the auditorium, passing original stained glass
windows in orange and gold. The room is massive, or at least larger than
one might suppose from the Chapel’s seemingly small exterior. Cracking
grey tiles complement the blue plaster peeling from the walls, scuffed
and smeared with 100 years of humanity. Above, the Roman revival vaulted
ceiling seems untouched by time. Once, when everyone enrolled owed
community service to the University, 100 students stained the timbers a
rich nutmeg brown. Now, while other surfaces crumble, those beams remain
pristine; it is as if the wood remembers and cherishes the care it one
received, the touch of 100 hands.
The auditorium is the closest
thing to a chapel that this old building ever was. When it was built in
1884, it was a nondenominational gathering place for the campus
community, hosting speakers and graduations for crowds of 300 to 600
people. Two rose windows allowed natural light to stream through from
the north and south, an unnecessary habit of the architect, as the
building is equipped with then-ground-breaking technology: electricity.
We
climb another stairwell, narrow this time, and round a corner to yet
more stairs, the steps steep and only 4 inches wide. Climbing sideways, I
mount the landing where the dusty carillon keyboard sits and the rope
pull for Old Aggie hangs slack. Though there are three-and-a-half
octaves of bells above me, I choose to plunk out Twinkle Twinkle Little
Star in six round, copper tones on the carillon keyboard. Another
tourist grabs hold of the thick rope and begins to ring Old Aggie – the
second time in a year that I have heard the bell sing. The tour guide
stops us from ringing the bells for too long lest we disrupt classes,
but I don’t care. Let them hear! Help them remember these forgotten
peals!
I wait my turn to climb the black ladder to the bell
tower’s next and smaller level, which houses the tower’s green-and-brass
clock works. Ascending to the next level via a smaller ladder, I find
myself head-first in the bells. There is no place to stand here, only
room to cling to the rungs as the open air whistles past my ears and
circles the copper. Above and around, the 43 bells of the Old Chapel
hang in perfect silence, waiting to be summoned to sing.
Descending the short ladder, the long ladder,This document provides a guide to using the ventilation system
in your house to provide adequate fresh air to residents. the steep
shallow steps, the narrow stairs, the wide stairwell, I find myself
again on the ground level. Tourists slip out the open front door as we
pass, their curiosity about the beautiful but abandoned building
satiated. Elegantly carved double doors paneled in opaque glass and
topped with colored panes lead us into the next room, a large classroom
with four massive beams supporting the ceiling. Across one blackboard,
names and messages have been scrawled in yellow and white chalk, most of
them in memory of the late Marching Band Director George Parks. Prior
to losing its certificate of occupancy in 1996, the building had been
used by the band for rehearsals, practice rooms and hanging out when the
rest of the burgeoning Music Department moved into the completed Fine
Arts Center in 1974.
One chalk scrawl catches my attention as I
pass: “I took French in this classroom in 1947.” As I walk into the next
classroom, I try to imagine the blackboards without the painted-on
music staves. I imagine rows of students in sweaters, skirts, and
trousers studying Flaubert and Moliere, practicing their conjugations.
The classrooms and adjoining staff offices had been built in 1935 as
part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal initiative, and at
the time housed the English and history departments, which moved to
Bartlett Hall when it was completed in 1960. The walls partition off
what had once been the school’s library.
When the Old Chapel was
built, the now dusty doorframes and whitewashed walls had been open
from the eastern outer wall to the western outer wall. Library stacks
formed up in rows, holding some 10,000 tomes, which grew to nearly
26,000 by 1905.China plastic moulds
manufacturers directory. A natural history display (more likely a
‘cabinet of curiosities’) stood somewhere among the stacks. Library
offices occupied the north, and a reading room for students occupied the
south.
Standing in that reading room more than a century later,
I could imagine the smell of printed pages and polished wood, could
hear the scratch of nibs on paper and the shuffle of hard-soled shoes.
Where bookcases had lined the walls, chalkboards were now installed.
Where portraits of prominent UMass officials had once hung above the
stacks, the band’s sorority and fraternity seals had been painted with
amateur strokes.
Though the building had been loved by the band
and used by many departments, I felt that somehow they didn’t truly
appreciate what they had, nor do the students who pass by the Chapel’s
stone facade every day. To many the Old Chapel is beautiful but silent,
useful as a landmark but nothing more.We mainly supply professional
craftspeople with crys talbeads wholesale shamballa Bracele , Though the exterior was renovated in 1998,Posts with indoor tracking
system on TRX Systems develops systems that locate and track personnel
indoors. the bell tower rebuilt, and the bells re-hung, the University
would not put up funds to finish the job, and so the interior continues
to decay. The Old Chapel is now nothing more than a Pelham granite and
Longmeadow sandstone case for 43 silent bells – a historic piece of
UMass slowly falling into oblivion.
If only that carillon could
sing in human tones: 43 voices singing of nearly 130 years of existence,
of the hands brushing stain on the wooden beams below, of young women
and men carefully pronouncing “Je sonne les cloches,” of tomes and tubas
and chalk words erased by a careless passing elbow; of a campus
transformed from open rolling fields to tight corridors and asphalt; of a
student population that neither knows nor cares of their decline.
Would
they worry when their voices echo through spaces where buildings once
were, or when they bounce back off buildings that weren’t there before?
Would they mourn the loss of the 1900s waiting station from their youth,
one of the earliest trolley stops in the area, demolished in the summer
or 2012? Would they miss the answering low of cows from the long-gone
livestock barns, now Herter Hall? Would they remember the way their
voices had bounced off the old Drill Hall, the University’s first
gymnasium, razed for Bartlett Hall in 1957?
Do they worry that
they too are headed the way of so many of the University’s legacy
buildings – disrepair until demolition? Does their echo reach the new
multi-million dollar facilities, the state-of-the-art laboratories,The
oreck XL professional air purifier,
the shining Commonwealth Honors College buildings, the innovative group
learning classrooms, the increased dormitory space? Or do those wizened
peals evaporate in the air, spiraling out from the mouths of the bells
until they have expanded into nothing?
I walk out the door of
the Chapel and descend the steps, listening to the lonely creak of the
hinges as the tour guide pulls it shut behind. I lean back and stare up
at the spire, wondering when I’ll hear those bells again, when the
building will be allowed to live again. For now, the Old Chapel is the
empty symbol of a University that would rather demolish its past than
save it, in the quest for a more prestigious future. It is a shell of
what it once was, a locked vault of fallen plaster, unsung copper, and a
University’s ignorance.
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