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Marsh Hall (Yale University)

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Built
  
1876

Designated NHL
  
January 12, 1965

Opened
  
1876

Added to NRHP
  
15 October 1966

NRHP Reference #
  
66000875

Designated CP
  
November 2, 1979

Area
  
3 ha

Architect
  
J. Cleaveland Cady

Marsh Hall (Yale University)

Location
  
360 Prospect Street, New Haven, Connecticut

Part of
  
Prospect Hill Historic District (#79002670)

Architectural styles
  
Queen Anne style architecture, Richardsonian Romanesque

Similar
  
Marsh Botanical Garden, Pierson‑Sage Garage, James Dwight Dana Ho, Yale University Connecti, Betts House

Marsh Hall, historically known as the Othniel C. Marsh House, is a historic house on Prospect Hill in New Haven, Connecticut. The property, which includes the house and a 6.8 acres (2.8 ha) grounds now known as Marsh Botanical Garden, was declared a National Historic Landmark in 1965. It was built in 1878 as the home of Othniel Marsh (1831–99), a leading 19th-century paleontologist, who occupied it until his death. The house is now owned by Yale University, and the building is occupied by the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies.

Contents

Map of Marsh Hall, 360 Prospect St, New Haven, CT 06511, USA

Description and history

The house is a 3.5-story brownstone structure, built of red sandstone, overlooking an expanse of landscaped greenery. Its architecture is reminiscent of the Jacobean revival, with asymmetrical massing, and a variety of projections, turrets, and decorative elements. It was designed for Marsh by J. Cleaveland Cady, and construction of the exterior of the main house was largely complete in 1878; it took another three years to finish the interior. The house is one of a relatively small number of Cady designs surviving in the city, and was one of the grandest private residences in the city at the time of its construction.

Othniel Marsh had an interest in fossils from an early age, and studied geology at Yale. Before and after graduating he went on numerous collecting trips throughout northeastern North America, and was appointed the first professor of paleontology. He engaged in repeated expeditions into the American West, sometimes returning with spectacular finds of dinosaurs and other large vertebrates. His finds of Cretaceous winged dinosaurs, complete with teeth and other non-avian features, provided compelling evidence in the debate over the recently published theory of evolution by natural selection. Marsh, a bachelor, bequeathed his estate to the university.

Marsh Hall currently houses offices of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies, including the "Global Institute of Sustainable Forestry".

References

Marsh Hall (Yale University) Wikipedia