Gargoyles
Gargoyles
GARGOYLES
of Princeton University
A grotesque tour of the campus
HERE WE WERE TAUGHT BY MEN AND GOTHIC TOWERS DEMOCRACY AND FAITH AND RIGHTEOUSNESS AND LOVE OF UNSEEN THINGS THAT DO NOT DIE.
H. E. Mierow '14
East Pyne
Built: l879 Design: W. A. Potter
Unseeing Reader
Over the east arch, facing Firestone Plaza
Flute Player
Extreme right of the south wall, western wing, facing Firestone Plaza
plaster model. The completed piece would be hoisted aloft and the uncarved end anchored in the masonry of the building. An architectural firm would approve the design of gargoyles, but would not produce them. Of particular interest in this regard is the Flute Player, a boss based on the book ornament of Simon Vostre. The cast submitted by Mr. Chambellan to the staff of the architectural firm, however, proved to be modeled on the architect, Mr. Kilham, who was also an excellent flautist.
University Chapel
Built: 1927 Design: Cram and Ferguson
Chained Dragon
Northwest doorway, facing Firestone Plaza
head did not burn; they were accustomed to being heated by the dragons fiery breath. The heads and necks of frightening beasts became popular motifs for medieval drain spouts. The word for throat in old French is gargouille closely related to the words gurgle and gargle, both descriptive of a gargoyles vocation. Princeton has very few figures that carry on the noble tradition; instead many Gothic buildings have beautifully wrought drain pipes as well as decorative beasts. Beautifully detailed carvings, such as the Chained Dragon, surrounding the Chapels doorways rival those of any cathedral. At the southwest doorway you will be able to observe at close range a bat and an owl. If you continue walking east along the south facade to the southeast corner of the building, you will discover a mark left by Architect Ralph Adams Cram, a Yale alumnus. Up on the metal drain pipe is a bulldogs scowling countenance.
McCosh Hall
Built: 1907 Design: R. C. Gildersleeve
Football Runner
West doorway, McCosh A
have been made of cement poured into a mold. However, each gargoyle, even if it appears to be exactly the same as one of its neighbors, has been individually carved. During the era in which they were created, the cost of making the mold and pouring each piece might well have equaled the cost of having someone carve duplicates. The inscription at the beginning of this booklet can be found in the archway that connects McCosh and Dickinson halls.
1879 Hall
Built: 1904 Design by: Benjamin Wistar Morris Jr.
Monkeys may symbolize that lower life form from which alumni arise. Proof of expeditious evolution may be found in the following literary gem:
Said the ape as it swung by its tail, To its children both female and male, From your children, my dears, In a couple of years, May evolve a professor at Yale.*
Or Princeton, but that wouldnt have rhymed. *From There Was a Young Lady Named Alice and Other Limerics by John Armstrong and Anatol Kovarsky.
Copyright 1963 by John Armstrong and Anatole Kovarsky. Reprinted by permission of Dell Publishing Company, Inc.
Benjamin Franklin
Northeast gable
The same article goes on to describe a companion gargoyle under the southwest gable of the building overlooking the Isabella McCosh Infirmary:
The figure mentioned seems to represent Teddy Roosevelt and his Big Stick policy. The old Rough Rider himself is up on the
wall, desperately trying to move a world the size of a baseball with a length of goal-post as his lever. The famous grin is accurately caricatured, his luxurious mustache and rimless pince-nez are recognizable, and his horselike teeth stand out like marble gateposts in the moonlight.
Guyot Hall
Built: 1909 Design: Parrish and Schroeder
Dinosaur Head
Northwest corner
Guyot hosts the greatest number of educational gargoyles on campusmore than sixty-five. Look for the trilobite, ammonite, horseshoe crab, giant scallop, ram, elephant, rhinoceros, eagle, wild boar, pelican, frog, turtle, sea horse, and pterodactyl.
Patton Hall
Built: 1906 Design: Benjamin Wistar Morris Jr.
Monkey Clown
East side, at the foot of Cuyler steps, or west side, center tower, south corner
As you proceed to the next gargoyle, take the route between Patton and Walker. After climbing the stairway to Cuyler Arch, be sure to look at the ceiling. The vaulting is punctuated by many intricate and interesting bosses. Together they form an exquisite bouquet of stone flowers.
Dillon Gymnasium
Rebuilt: 1947 Design: Aymar Embury II
Literate Ape
Main (north) entrance
hairy-haunched satyr ready for a game of soccer. Strange heads and groups of characters line both arches of the east entrance. Note the tiny trio of football players who appear to be praying for victory. Or are they praying they wont be eaten by a nearby large, ferocious-looking grotesque wearing a monocle?
became equated with the Christian devils who consider humans a great delicacy. According to British folklore, giants were often symbols of virility and prosperity. Princetons Man with an Open Mouth clutches a sack full of somethingperhaps payment for eons of steady employment as a gargoyle. Littles tower and north end are home to a sundry company of gargoyles. Dont miss the Bear Bass Player, the Angel with a Lute, Maiden with a Monkey, the Trumpeter, the Pugilists, the Grim Reaper (with a lamb), various contortionists, including one hanging upside-down with a ball from a crook in the molding, and way up a student beer drinker.
Blair Arch
Built: 1897 Design: Cope and Stewardson
musicians (left) serenade them with trumpet and mandolin. A few out-of-the-way grotesques live on the tower over the arch that joins Blair and Joline halls on University Place. Facing the courtyard, above and to the right of the bay window over the arch, is the Tongue Twister, a diminutive woman who grasps the tongue of the huge face next to her. On the left side of the bay window is a swashbuckler holding a curved sword in one hand and his opponents head in the other. On the north side of the tower, seen from the street, an architect displays a model of the dormitory and a bag filled with money. On the west side of the tower, facing University Place, a student has fallen fast asleep over a book on his desk.
crossed flags. Over the window are two true gargoyles. On the northeast end of the building, facing the north courtyard over the Harry Steele Morrison entrance (3rd Entry), a biplane is about to take off from the gutter. Its stirring up a lot of dust in the process. Higher up on the right are two cannons aimed at Little Hall. Since each one has a pipe inserted through its barrel, they appear to be real gargoyles. Directly below them, at ground level, is a frieze that shows a biplane being tossed out of control by the breath of four titans.
Head of a Soldier
Northwest end of dormitory near street
The Head of a Soldier is not only the depiction of one man, but
of many men who died during wars They are commemorated by the bronze stars on the window sills of the dormitory rooms where they once lived. The soldier looks toward an open sky, perhaps to a better world. His expression is placid and hopeful. Above the plaque that dedicates the building to Howard Houston Henry 04 is a statue of St. George, a slain dragon at his feet. This statue, like the one of St. Michael on the adjoining building, is by A. Sterling Calder (father of Alexander) and is flanked by swords over which open books are laid. Other decorations include horses heads below the bay window overlooking University Place and a star-studded wheel crossed by a sword and a keythe insignia of the Quartermaster Corps. Above this bay window are two true water-spouting gargoyles. Sometimes they are called frogs, but they also look like dolphins, those whimsical water
creatures that frolic alongside sinking ships and mermaids in rococo paintings. If you walk south on University Place, you will find some fierce eagles perched on the west wall of Henrys tower. The tower itself is adorned by several beautiful shields and way, way up on the south side near the fire escape a pensive statue portraying the scholarly warrior also by A. Sterling Calder. The side of Henry that faces the courtyard has two interesting friezes at ground level. One shows Washington crossing the Delaware; the other depicts the Battle of Princeton. Also at ground level, the Middle Entry is guarded by the head of a baseball player, his face covered by a catchers mask.
the recent ban on student-owned motor cars, this particular gargoyle is an especially significant commentary.
A squealing pig and a ruffled goose rush from under the wheels of the small vehicle driving toward Princeton Inn College. Today, her cigarette and his cigar are gone. Not far to the left of the Joy Ride, a startled, bespectacled Book Worm emerges from the large volume he has just burrowed through. Also on the east wall (between the Book Worm and the parking lot, over three vaulted windows) a little man, pipe
in mouth, reads by the light of a gooseneck lamp. Another young man has cranked up his gramophone and basks in its silent racket. Inside the inner courtyard to the north are many small carved figures. On the left, on one side of a vaulted window (to the right of the 21st Entry) a carefree motorist at the wheel of his car is brought to a halt by a solemn policeman on the other side. A helmeted knight prepares to skewer a tiny dragon on either side of the 20th Entry. A hawk in pince-nez looks down from the drainpipe at the northwest corner of the courtyard near the 19th Entry. A dog-eared bat and an owl guard the 17th Entry. Behind some large bushes (southeast corner of courtyard over a bay window) an explorer raises his telescope and an alchemist balances a retort. Within Procter Hall is the subject of the best-known gargoyle rumor: the heads carved on the ends of the wooden hammer beams portray the smiling countenances of the Trustees of the day, several with an object in their hands denoting the source of their wealth.
In the year 2000 or thereabouts, no doubt some enterprising student in the Graduate College will make these grotesque carvings the subject of a dissertation for his doctorate. (Princeton Alumni Weekly, February 10, 1909)
Thanks to: Hugh de N. Wynne 39, whose invaluable aid in stalking the gargoyles made this booklet possible, and Carl Brauer 32 Anthony Cifelli William Fiabane George Griffing Catherine Judd Margaret Keenan Elizabeth Menzies Elizabeth Sears Betty Wolfe Ann Woolfolk
Concept developed by Mary Jane Lydenberg, Annual Giving Written by Laurel Masten Cantor Designed by Mahlon Lovett Drawings by Heather Lovett from photographs by Claire Bien, Elizabeth Menzies, and John Simpson 66 Architectural photographs by Mahlon Lovett Published by the Office of Communications/Publications, Stanhope Hall Printed by Havertown Printing