Construction progress on the College of Business Administration Building (David A. Straz, Jr. Hall), circa 1951. Workers appear to be pouring the concrete floors. Visible in the background are the temporary barracks constructed to accommodate the...
Remarks from the College of Business Administration Dedication Luncheon, December 2, 1984. Includes remarks by Eugene Laczniak, Professor, College of Business Administration; Thomas Bausch, Dean, College of Business Administration; Edward Brennan,...
View looking north at the College of Business Administration Building construction site, circa 1951. Visible in the background, immediately to the north of the building are the temporary barracks constructed to accommodate the postwar growth in...
Work progresses at the College of Business Administration Building construction site in this view looking to the northeast, circa 1951. Visible in the background are the barracks buildings, Marquette Hall, Gesu Church, and the Gesu Parish Center.
Students in Marquette's College of Nursing participate in a five-mile march to the site of their new building on 16th Street, March 1981. They carry a number of signs, reading, "We're on the Move," "M.U. College of Nursing," and "MU Marquette...
Students in Marquette's College of Nursing and administrators (including Gregory Olson, front) near the end of a five-mile march to the site of their new building on 16th Street, March 1981.
Milwaukee Archbishop Moses Kiley presides at the cornerstone laying for the College of Business Administration Building (David A. Straz, Jr., Hall), October 10, 1950.
Milwaukee Archbishop Moses Kiley presides at the cornerstone laying for the College of Business Administration building (later David A. Straz, Jr. Hall), October 10, 1950. In the foreground are Rev. Thomas F. Divine (left), deacon, and Rev. Cyril...
Milwaukee Archbishop Moses Kiley and Rev. Thomas F. Divine, S.J. preside at the cornerstone laying for the College of Business Administration building (later David A. Straz, Jr. Hall), October 10, 1950.
Marchese Bros., Inc. excavates the site of the College of Business Administration Building (David A. Straz, Jr. Hall), 1951. Visible in the background are the barracks buildings constructed on the Marquette campus to accommodate the postwar growth...
A piano and spinning wheel are amongst the furniture decorating one of the studios in Marquette's College of Music, 1923. This studio in the Japanese Room of the former John Plankinton Mansion featured elaborate woodwork.
Remarks by the Dean of the College of Nursing of Marquette University, Dr. M. Rosalie Klein, O.S.F., upon the occasion of the formal dedication of Emory T. Clark Hall, Marquette University College of Nursing, October 24, 1982.
Remarks by Marquette University President Rev. Albert J. DiUlio, S.J., at the College of Business Administration Dedication as David A. Straz, Jr. Hall, December 2, 1984.
Remarks by Business Administration Student Council President Tim Reardon at the College of Business Administration Dedication as David A. Straz, Jr. Hall, December 2, 1984.
Remarks by Business Administration Alumni Association President Patrick Mulcahy at the College of Business Administration Dedication as David A. Straz, Jr. Hall, December 2, 1984.
Remarks by Business Administration Dean Thomas Bausch at the College of Business Administration Dedication as David A. Straz, Jr. Hall, December 2, 1984.
Remarks by Marquette University President Rev. John P. Raynor, S.J., at the College of Business Administration Dedication as David A. Straz, Jr. Hall, December 2, 1984.
Ted C. Dziadulewicz, assistant dean of the College of Engineering, and Richard Panlener, director of the Placement Center, view a sculpture in Haggerty Hall, 1967. The sculpture, a stylized cityscape, mounted in the engineering library, was...
Marquette University President Rev. Edward J. O'Donnell begins digging during the groundbreaking ceremony for the College of Business Administration building (David A. Straz, Jr. Hall) on January 10, 1950. Joining him, from left to right, are...
Workers haul cement from a mixer while a crowd watches progress on the construction of a building for the College of Business Administration (David A. Straz, Jr. Hall), circa 1951. Visible in the background is the Gesu Parish Center.
Mid-range view of a decorative leather door in the Japanese suite in the John Plankinton Mansion, circa April 1973. The door features a variety of flowers and other oriental motifs and is flanked by bamboo woodwork.
The John Plankinton Mansion, as seen from West Wisconsin Avenue during its early years before it came to be surrounded by the Marquette University campus.
View of the east facade of the John Plankinton Mansion, with Haggerty Engineering to the north of it and McCormick Hall in the background. This image appears to have been taken just to the south of Memorial Library, looking west.
A room within the John Plankinton Mansion, turned into broadcast room for the School of Speech. A microphone is visible at the center of the room, and a window looks through into another classroom, circa 1953.
View of an empty classroom within the John Plankinton Mansion, May 4, 1953. At the front of the room are an empty desk and table, as well as a variety of broadcast equipment. A window looks through to an attached broadcast room.
A room in the John Plankinton Mansion, converted to a classroom and broadcast booth, circa 1953. A variety of technologies are visible next to a window looking in to the broadcast booth.
Cars are parked in the driveway leading to the main (north) entrance to the John Plankinton Mansion, circa 1930. Workers can be seen repairing the roof above one of the windows.
View of the east facade of the John Plankinton Mansion, tucked between the Walter Schroeder Health Sciences and Education Complex and Haggerty Hall, 1975.
Students walk on the sidewalk to the east of the John Plankinton Mansion during registration, August 1974. Visible at left is the Walter Schroeder Health Sciences and Education Complex; to the right is Haggerty Halla.
Students climb the stairs to go in the east entrance to the John Plankinton Mansion, May 4, 1953. The building, which housed the School of Speech at that time, was nestled between the Schroeder Complex at left and Haggerty Hall at right.
Detail view of a bas relief or plaster ornamentation on the exterior of the John Plankinton Mansion. The artwork features an urn filled with flowers and a lion, amongst other details.