Eaton Hall is a brick and stone college hall on the campus of Willamette University in Salem, Oregon, United States. Completed in 1909, the four story building is the fourth oldest building on the campus after Waller Hall (1867), Gatke Hall (1903), and the Art Building (1907).[1]
HistoryEaton Hall was built from 1907 to 1908.[2] The Late Gothic Revival style building was dedicated on September 21, 1909, and named in honor of A.E. Eaton.[2][3] Eaton donated $50,000 for the construction of the hall.[2] He owned the Union Woolen Mills in Eastern Oregon.[2] Eaton Hall was home to Willamette’s law school from 1923 until 1938.[4] During the 1960s the structure housed the school’s office of the president, the registrar, the school’s telephone switchboard, and business offices.[5] In 1983 the building's interior was remodeled.[1] The building was added to Salem’s Historic Properties List in 1984.[6] Then in the spring of 2004, a $1.4 million dollar renovation of the building’s fourth floor was completed.[7] CurrentlyLocated on the north end of campus, it is adjacent to Waller Hall to the west and Smullin Hall to the east. To the south is an open field which previously served as the school's football field.[1] The building currently houses Willamette’s humanities programs.[7] This includes the Anthropology, Religion, English, History, Classics, Rhetoric, and Philosophy departments.citation needed See alsoReferences
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