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Exhibits:
Remembering the GI Bulge:
Temporary Housing/Temporary Classrooms

Temporary Classrooms

Veterans The "GI Bulge" brought the need for more housing and classrooms. Classroom buildings sprouted behind Crouse College and at other locations around the main campus. This photo shows temporary classrooms behind Crouse College. Others were constructed near Carnegie Library, Bowne Hall, Sims Hall, Slocum Hall and Machinery Hall.

Veterans A series of pre-fab metal classroom buildings were shipped in from a California military base after World War II. This photograph of the interior (circa 1953) shows the cramped quarters students and faculty shared. An interesting sidelight given today's classroom environment is that smoking was allowed in these metal classrooms.

Thompson Road

Veterans In 1948 a new Engineering and research campus was opened on Thomspon Road necessitating the bussing of students.






Temporary Housing

Temporary housing peppered the landscape from the site of present-day Manley Fieldhouse to Drumlins. Housing was secured wherever it could be found, and when it coudn't be found it was created from scratch!

Syracuse University Magazine, February 1987, painted a clear picture of the housing situation on campus after World War II. It listed the following quarters for veterans and their families:

In addition, until the new housing was ready on campus, students lived all over the Greater Syracuse area, including:

Busses transported students to the distant living quarters. The buses, painted blue and orange, were quickly named "Blue Beetles."

Trailer Park at Drumlins

Veterans The trailer park at Drumlins was a village of 175 trailers for married students in a former apple orchard across the street from the present Tecumseh Elementary School.

Drumlins

Dean Eunice Hilton At Drumlins veterans could shop at the Veterans' Co-op Food Store. The clerk in this photo, Frances Marvin, and the customer, Charlotte Gates, were both wives of veteran students at S.U. The Archives now has color photographs of the Drumlins Trailer Park. They are a gift from Wesley Peterson, '50.

The Quonseteria

Veterans Arguably the most prominent temporary structure was the Quonseteria, a dining hall on Comstock near the corner of Colvin, which was erected in 1947. The name for the structure was coined by Andrew Cisternino of Syracuse who garnered a $10 prize in the competition. The building later became a Food Service bake shop and store room, the Microbiology and Biochemistry Center, and in its waning years was the home of the S.U. wrestling team. It lasted until the 1980s.