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Homewood Campus Tour
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McCoy Hall
The University purchased the Greenway Apartments in 1963, during
a housing shortage caused by increased enrollment. In 1965 the
building ws renamed McCoy Hall in honor of John W. McCoy. McCoy,
a wealthy Baltimore merchant, first took an interest in the
University in 1884, when he was elected the first president of
the Baltimore Society of the Archaeological Institute of America,
which also served as the Hopkins Archaeological Seminary. Upon
his death in 1889, McCoy left the University his 8,000-volume
library, his house, and approximately half a million dollars, the
largest gift since Johns Hopkins's original bequest. The house
served as the president's residence until 1898, while the money
was used to build the original McCoy Hall, which held the
humanities departments at the old downtown campus. That building
burned while it was standing vacant, shortly after the University
moved to Homewood. The University renovated the present McCoy
Hall in 1991-92.
© 2004 The Johns Hopkins University.
Baltimore, Maryland. All rights reserved.
Last updated 01Aug04 by dgips@jhu.edu
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