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Long the dream of Professor Charles
Francis Himes, Tome Scientific Building was Dickinson College’s first building
constructed solely for scientific purposes. Situated along Louther Street,
on the Carlisle, Pennsylvania campus between Old
West and East
College, the building was completed on June 24, 1885, to the design
of architect Charles L. Carson. The construction costs of $23,000
were more than covered by a generous $25,000 donation made by the building’s
namesake, Jacob
Tome. The building featured classroom and office wings, with the center
serving as a museum. This museum was removed in 1947 when the chemical
laboratories were enlarged, a renovation that cost $35,000.
In 1958, Tome underwent a $165,000 interior renovation, the building being completely remodeled with much-needed modern equipment. This new look included the Bonisteel Planetarium which was installed in the center space formerly occupied by the museum. The planetarium was designed by Henry L. Yeagley, professor of natural philosophy, and was financed by a $50,000 donation from Roscoe O. Bonisteel, class of 1912. For an extended time, Tome had the distinction of being the longest serving college science center in the United States. It had exclusively served the physics and astronomy department for more than forty years. With the completion of the New Science Building in 2000, however, Tome was converted to a global education building and was renamed as the Marc and Eva Stern Foundation Center for Global Education. |
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For more information please follow the links below:
Video Clip - Tome c.1958