You are correct about Hotard.... it was built at the same time as the Northside
corps-style dorms (Davis-Gary, Moses, Crocker). Its original usage was as
living space for the hispanic workers on campus, many of whom pulled duty in
Sbisa. When the school started growing so quickly in the 70's and 80's, it was
converted to "regular student" dorm usage for a time, then converted to office
space.
-----Original Message-----
From: Gary Hoffmeister <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: fighting_texas_aggie_band_class_of_1977@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<fighting_texas_aggie_band_class_of_1977@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Mon, Mar 15, 2021 9:47 pm
Subject: [fighting_texas_aggie_band_class_of_1977] Re: Ceiling fan
Chiming in at the end of this - I thought it was "Hotard" dorm, next to the
post office at Northgate, that did not have A/C.
Gary H.
On Monday, March 15, 2021, 08:58:54 AM CDT, Edward Retta
<eretta@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Dean, those dorm names ring a bell. It was surely one of those, maybe Bolton.
What I remember most was paying about $45 bucks for rent for one summer
session.Those old dorms felt kinda historic… with historic ceiling fans.
Edward Retta
On Mar 15, 2021, at 8:25 AM, Dean & Mickey Brown (Redacted sender "dean.mickey"
for DMARC) <dmarc-noreply@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Ed, was it Milner, Legget, or Bolton? Those were the ancient dorms that had
the weird entrance, with three doors and you had to pick the right one for the
right stairs? I think they called those air well dorms, because the had a open
air shaft in the middle
Those have all been gutted, and rebuilt as offices, as far as I know
Dean