Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Westminster College Gymnasium

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Area
  
less than one acre

NRHP Reference #
  
68000030

Opened
  
1929

Added to NRHP
  
23 May 1968

Built
  
1929 (1929)

Designated NHL
  
May 2, 1968

Architectural style
  
Neoclassical architecture

Westminster College Gymnasium

Location
  
Westminster College campus (CF Lampkin Dr.), Fulton, Missouri

Similar
  
St Mary Aldermanbury, National Churchill Museum, Capital Mall, The Blue Note

National churchill museum berlin wall


Westminster College Gymnasium is a historic athletic building on the campus of Westminster College in Fulton, Missouri. The building is famous for being the site of Winston Churchill's March 5, 1946 "Sinews of Peace" speech, in which he coined the phrase "Iron Curtain" to characterize the growing Cold War. In 1968, the gymnasium was designated a National Historic Landmark.

Contents

Description and history

The Westminster College Gymnasium stands prominently on the western edge of the greensward created by the CF Lampkin Drive, a loop road providing access to a portion of the college's campus. It is a two-story brick building, 80 by 155 feet (24 m × 47 m), with Classical Revival features. The front is five bays wide, with the center three projecting. The bays of the central portion are articulated by fluted Corinthian pilasters, and are topped by tall decorative parapet. Windows on the upper floor are set in round-arch windows, while those in the first floor are regular sash. The interior of the building is arranged with a central lobby flanked by office wings, and the gymnasium arena occupying most of the rear of the structure. The interior, in particular the gym space, has been relatively little altered since its construction, which was in 1928-29.

Westmister College decided to invite Winston Churchill to make a speech on its campus in 1946, during a planned trip. Churchill's agreement was secured through the work of Major General Harry Vaughan, a Westminster alumnus on the staff of United States President Harry S. Truman. Churchill agreed, and the speech he delivered in March 5, before a crowd of 2,000 in this gym, has since been immortalized for its dramatic description of the political climate in Europe. He stated that

"From Stettin in the Baltic to Trieste in the Adriatic, an iron curtain has descended across the Continent."

The speech focused on the United Nations, nuclear proliferation and expansionist activities of the Soviet Union. Although the speech was initially not well received, it was one of the first high-profile expressions of the growing Cold War environment, and the "Iron Curtain" phrase eventually became a useful metaphor for the division of Europe during that period.

Westminster College maintains a museum devoted to Churchill in another building.

References

Westminster College Gymnasium Wikipedia


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