Knowledge (XXG)

Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity House (Moscow, Idaho)

Source 📝

311:
stairwell lines up with the large front door. In 1932 the "Boar's Nest" (now called the library) was accessed through the "Stag Room" (now called the informal room) and the "Radio Room" (now called the president's room) was accessed through the formal room. The "Radio Room" was where SAEs played ping pong and listened to music and football games on the chapter radio. For years a radio antenna was strung between the two brick chimneys to pick up radio signals. The formal room, informal room and library have brick fireplaces. At the rear of the first floor directly above the basement cook's apartment was the house mother's room which had a full bathroom and a fold down wall bed. During the 1930s and 1940s the house mother lived in the chapter house. Beginning in the 1950s the house mother's room was a facility for overnight guests such as SAE parents and served as a bathroom for dates during dances held in the chapter house.
327:
Greg Toolson (Idaho Alpha 1982) served as architect. The house corporation led by Bill McCann (Idaho Alpha 1966) and Gary Garnand (Idaho Alpha 1970) oversaw the 10 month $ 2.5 million construction project. Lori McCann (wife of Bill McCann and Order of Violets recipient) led the interior design effort. The reconstruction kept most of the basement and all of the first floor layout true to the 1932 architectural plans. Interior walls were taken down to the brick outside walls and then rebuilt. All heating, electrical and plumbing systems were replaced. The building was updated to current fire and access building code requirements. Interior chapter house area was increased to 13,638 square feet with capacity for 63 men. During 2013 three of the first floor study rooms were combined to create a house director apartment which reduced house capacity to 58 men plus the house director.
269:
was occupied by a two-story house and a small barn. Although the lot was at the edge of campus it was considered a perfect location to build an imposing chapter house. Across Sweet Avenue was the newly planted arboretum and there were empty fields behind the property available for football and baseball games. Although Sweet Avenue was a muddy rutted dirt road, it connected to the slowly improving North South Highway that connected Moscow with Lewiston and southern Idaho. The new SAE chapter house was designed by Spokane architect Charles I. Carpenter who also was the architect for a number of public buildings during his career that included court houses, city halls and lodge buildings in Spokane and Moscow. Carpenter chose the Colonial Revival building style for the SAE chapter house to maximize interior living space for the construction dollar.
48: 315:
Record magazine reported that there were five sleeping dormitories in the house: two on the second floor (pledge and sophomore sleeping porches) and three more on the third floor (two large and one small dormitories). Due to lessons learned in the 1917/1918 influenza epidemic the small dormitory was reserved as an infirmary. The University of Idaho student newspaper reported in 1932 that SAEs slept in new "double bunk beds with luxurious spring mattresses". Electric blankets to keep fraternity members warm during winter nights were not introduced to the open sleeping porches until the 1957/1958 school year.
319:
front entry steps were donated in 1961 by Bill Currie (Idaho Alpha 1959). The lions were acquired from a vacated bank building in the San Francisco - Oakland area. The 1947 pledge class obtained the house bell from a closed school in the Moscow area. It was cast in 1892 in Michigan and a study room window leading out to the sophomore sleeping porch roof needed to be removed to move the bell onto the deck. The bell was cracked when it was rung all day in celebration of the 1954 football victory over Washington State.
90: 65: 980: 991: 335:
life long friendships that began at 920 Deakin in Moscow, Idaho. The SAE chapter house designed by Charles I. Carpenter has achieved its goal of creating a fraternity "feeling and association" that promoted strong fraternal bonds through communal dining and sleeping facilities. Idaho Alpha of Sigma Alpha Epsilon was recognized by the Interfraternity Council (IFC) and returned to the University of Idaho in 2022.
97: 72: 303:
walls support the roof and the upper two floors are supported inside the walls by an independently standing steel frame box that was designed to facilitate future remodeling. Advanced 1932 amenities included two man study rooms with built in study desks, an electric kitchen range and an electric refrigerator. There was an electric fan to cool the kitchen and dining room on hot days.
273:
provides access for delivery vans and student parking at the rear. A narrower semicircular cement drive installed in the 1950s crosses the lot in front of the house. Today mature landscaping in the front includes shrubs, large spruce and birch trees. The front lawn is crossed by a concrete walkway leading from the intersection to the front door.
331:
Greek chapter houses during the 1920s and 1930s. The 1993 National Register citation states that "after more than sixty year of continuous use as a fraternity residence the SAE house retains its integrity of location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling and association since construction in 1932".
322:
At the beginning of the 1932 fall semester 41 SAEs moved into the new chapter house designed for 45 men. During the 1950s chapter house capacity was expanded to 62 men by adding three and four level bunk beds on the sleeping porches converting two third floor dormitories to study rooms and increasing
314:
The second and third floor bathroom and shower facilities were directly above the first floor house mother's room. The two upper floors held 14 study rooms which kept their original 1932 room numbers until the 2008 rebuilding project changed the floor layouts. Articles in the 1932 Sigma Alpha Epsilon
306:
The fully exposed basement contained the boiler and nearby coal storage room, kitchen, dining room, cook's apartment and house manager's room. The basement's most private space was reserved for the chapter room. During the 1960s and later there were three basement study rooms: Room 69 (previously the
264:
sorority moved into its newly built chapter house across from the Administration Building Lawn where the music building is now. ZXA successfully petitioned the national Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity for a charter in 1919. The first SAE chapter house capacity of approximately 20 men was expanded in a
334:
Between 1932 and 2019 the 87 year old chapter house was a center of University of Idaho college memories for over 2,100 college men and women (1,700+ SAEs, 350+ Little Sisters of Minerva and 72 Violet Queens). The saplings planted in 1932 have grown into large mature trees just like the thousands of
330:
The Sigma Alpha Epsilon chapter house on almost an acre of land was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1993 in recognition of its architectural significance. On a local level it is a good example of Colonial Revival architecture which was one of the two dominant styles applied to
326:
A structural engineering inspection in 2002 found that the basement dining room floor, the bathrooms and others areas of the 73-year-old building had deteriorated significantly. A successful alumni fundraising campaign led by Rich Allen (Idaho Alpha 1972) enabled reconstruction to begin early 2008.
294:
The 150,000 bricks used to build the SAE chapter house were produced by the Moscow Fire Brick & Clay Products in kilns located on Sweet Avenue close to the North South Highway. This Moscow company also manufactured the bricks used in many of the downtown Moscow and University of Idaho buildings
268:
The goal of the local ZXA fraternity and then the SAE chapter was to be the dominant fraternity at the University of Idaho. Searching for a location that would support this goal, the house corporation found a corner lot several blocks away at the intersection of Deakin Street and Sweet Avenue that
318:
Originally the long narrow space beneath the front entry was intended to be a bowling alley. The space soon began to be used to sight in hunting rifles for deer season and the name was changed to the "Shooting Gallery" to reflect this use. The two lions (aka "Phi" and "Alpha") on both sides of the
310:
From the front the second story of the chapter house is at ground level. The front facade features a symmetrical design whose primary focus is the recessed formal center entry. Two large social rooms, the informal room on the right and the formal room on the left, flank the entry hall and a center
302:
The new four story SAE chapter house designed for 45 men was a marvel of its day. Interior space was divided by function: food, recreation, service, storage in the basement; primarily social areas on the first floor; study and sleeping areas on the second and third floors. Four load bearing brick
272:
The SAE chapter house is set diagonally on its large corner lot, facing the intersection of Deakin and Sweet streets. Because the lot drops considerably from front to rear, the full height of the basement is exposed at the rear and sides of the building but not on the facade. An asphalt driveway
298:
Newspaper articles reported that the fraternity's new chapter house costing $ 52,145 in 1932 dollars (about $ 990,000 in 2020 dollars) was the most expensive in the Pacific Northwest. The 1931 lot purchase and construction the next year was financed by alumni donations, cashed in life insurance
290:
months partly due to the ample inexpensive labor available in the Great Depression. Architectural plans were completed in early 1932, and construction began in the spring. Contractors completed the excavation and poured footings by late May, laid the brick walls during the next two months and
299:
policies, undergraduate SAE's gold panning profits, sale of the 904 chapter house and the purchase of a $ 10,000 bond with a 2 1/2 percent interest rate by Charles Bocock (Illinois Beta 1899) a SAE alumni brother who was the president of the Albion State Normal School in Albion, Idaho.
1050: 259:
The first chapter house of the Idaho Alpha chapter of Sigma Alpha Epsilon was at 904 Deakin, the intersection of Deakin Street and College Avenue, close to the student union building. ZXA, a newly established local fraternity, rented the boarding house in 1916 after the
869: 1015: 964: 900: 884: 874: 130: 959: 905: 1020: 253: 546: 926: 828: 859: 793: 758: 833: 738: 698: 523: 798: 788: 783: 763: 879: 713: 628: 1045: 748: 743: 618: 838: 803: 708: 683: 823: 773: 753: 728: 718: 703: 693: 678: 658: 633: 623: 613: 291:
finished the roof before the end of July. Workmen kept on schedule allowing fraternity members to move into their new quarters before the start of the new school year in September 1932.
843: 818: 723: 663: 643: 638: 608: 598: 778: 733: 673: 648: 603: 910: 808: 688: 653: 89: 1040: 864: 813: 768: 668: 576: 561: 516: 592: 64: 1025: 344: 994: 509: 984: 47: 556: 532: 372: 34: 307:
cook's apartment) the Hole (the house manager's room off of the dining room) and the Mole (a small two man room off of the chapter room).
323:
the number of men in most study rooms. Minor building remodels were completed in 1968, 1978 and 1993 to refresh and update the building.
1035: 947: 1030: 249: 952: 931: 566: 571: 551: 398: 377: 245: 241: 468:
Gems for Minerva's Crown: The History of Sigma Alpha Epsilon 1919-2019 at the University of Idaho
395:"National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity House" 411: 265:
1923 remodel but toward the end of the 1920s the SAE chapter had again outgrown the building.
394: 501: 261: 216: 1051:
University and college buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Idaho
1009: 237: 118: 965:
University and college buildings listed on the National Register of Historic Places
495:
National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (November 2, 2013).
146: 132: 96: 71: 1016:
Residential buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Idaho
960:
List of jails and prisons on the National Register of Historic Places
461: 459: 457: 455: 453: 451: 449: 447: 445: 443: 441: 439: 437: 435: 433: 431: 429: 427: 425: 423: 421: 419: 248:. The house was designed by architect Charles I. Carpenter in the 367: 505: 1021:
National Register of Historic Places in Latah County, Idaho
240:. It was built in 1932 for the Idaho Alpha chapter of 940: 919: 893: 852: 585: 562:
History of the National Register of Historic Places
539: 222: 209: 201: 193: 178: 170: 124: 113: 1046:University and college buildings completed in 1932 593:List of U.S. National Historic Landmarks by state 985:National Register of Historic Places portal 345:North American fraternity and sorority housing 517: 276:The large chapter house was rapidly built in 8: 1041:University of Idaho buildings and structures 524: 510: 502: 46: 533:U.S. National Register of Historic Places 389: 387: 35:U.S. National Register of Historic Places 356: 1026:Colonial Revival architecture in Idaho 368:"National Register Information System" 362: 360: 18: 7: 491: 489: 487: 485: 483: 481: 479: 477: 373:National Register of Historic Places 254:National Register of Historic Places 234:Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity House 158:Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity House 27:Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity House 948:National Historic Preservation Act 236:is a historic fraternity house in 14: 990: 989: 978: 95: 88: 70: 63: 901:Federated States of Micronesia 547:Architectural style categories 211: 1: 295:built in the 1920s to 1950s. 104:Show map of the United States 252:. It has been listed on the 16:United States historic place 1067: 1036:Sigma Alpha Epsilon houses 953:Historic Preservation Fund 932:American Legation, Morocco 973: 894:Lists by associated state 256:since December 31, 1993. 210:NRHP reference  57: 45: 41: 32: 25: 21: 1031:Houses completed in 1932 875:Northern Mariana Islands 202:Architectural style 870:Minor Outlying Islands 853:Lists by insular areas 567:Keeper of the Register 250:Colonial Revival style 147:46.72611°N 117.00556°W 572:National Park Service 552:Contributing property 466:Mottern, Jim (2019). 412:accompanying pictures 399:National Park Service 378:National Park Service 927:District of Columbia 197:Charles I. Carpenter 152:46.72611; -117.00556 380:. November 2, 2013. 246:University of Idaho 242:Sigma Alpha Epsilon 142: /  117:920 Deakin Street, 174:less than one acre 1003: 1002: 557:Historic district 230: 229: 79:Show map of Idaho 52:The house in 2017 1058: 993: 992: 983: 982: 981: 906:Marshall Islands 526: 519: 512: 503: 496: 493: 472: 471: 463: 414: 409: 407: 405: 391: 382: 381: 364: 289: 288: 284: 281: 226:December 2, 1993 213: 205:Colonial Revival 189: 187: 166: 165: 163: 162: 161: 159: 154: 153: 148: 143: 140: 139: 138: 135: 105: 99: 98: 92: 80: 74: 73: 67: 50: 19: 1066: 1065: 1061: 1060: 1059: 1057: 1056: 1055: 1006: 1005: 1004: 999: 979: 977: 969: 936: 915: 889: 848: 581: 535: 530: 500: 499: 494: 475: 465: 464: 417: 403: 401: 393: 392: 385: 366: 365: 358: 353: 341: 286: 282: 279: 277: 185: 183: 157: 155: 151: 149: 145: 144: 141: 136: 133: 131: 129: 128: 109: 108: 107: 106: 103: 102: 101: 100: 83: 82: 81: 78: 77: 76: 75: 53: 37: 28: 17: 12: 11: 5: 1064: 1062: 1054: 1053: 1048: 1043: 1038: 1033: 1028: 1023: 1018: 1008: 1007: 1001: 1000: 998: 997: 987: 974: 971: 970: 968: 967: 962: 957: 956: 955: 944: 942: 938: 937: 935: 934: 929: 923: 921: 917: 916: 914: 913: 908: 903: 897: 895: 891: 890: 888: 887: 885:Virgin Islands 882: 877: 872: 867: 862: 860:American Samoa 856: 854: 850: 849: 847: 846: 841: 836: 831: 826: 821: 816: 811: 806: 801: 796: 794:South Carolina 791: 786: 781: 776: 771: 766: 761: 759:North Carolina 756: 751: 746: 741: 736: 731: 726: 721: 716: 711: 706: 701: 696: 691: 686: 681: 676: 671: 666: 661: 656: 651: 646: 641: 636: 631: 626: 621: 616: 611: 606: 601: 596: 589: 587: 586:Lists by state 583: 582: 580: 579: 577:Property types 574: 569: 564: 559: 554: 549: 543: 541: 537: 536: 531: 529: 528: 521: 514: 506: 498: 497: 473: 415: 383: 355: 354: 352: 349: 348: 347: 340: 337: 262:Gamma Phi Beta 228: 227: 224: 220: 219: 214: 207: 206: 203: 199: 198: 195: 191: 190: 180: 176: 175: 172: 168: 167: 126: 122: 121: 115: 111: 110: 94: 93: 87: 86: 85: 84: 69: 68: 62: 61: 60: 59: 58: 55: 54: 51: 43: 42: 39: 38: 33: 30: 29: 26: 23: 22: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 1063: 1052: 1049: 1047: 1044: 1042: 1039: 1037: 1034: 1032: 1029: 1027: 1024: 1022: 1019: 1017: 1014: 1013: 1011: 996: 988: 986: 976: 975: 972: 966: 963: 961: 958: 954: 951: 950: 949: 946: 945: 943: 939: 933: 930: 928: 925: 924: 922: 918: 912: 909: 907: 904: 902: 899: 898: 896: 892: 886: 883: 881: 878: 876: 873: 871: 868: 866: 863: 861: 858: 857: 855: 851: 845: 842: 840: 837: 835: 834:West Virginia 832: 830: 827: 825: 822: 820: 817: 815: 812: 810: 807: 805: 802: 800: 797: 795: 792: 790: 787: 785: 782: 780: 777: 775: 772: 770: 767: 765: 762: 760: 757: 755: 752: 750: 747: 745: 742: 740: 739:New Hampshire 737: 735: 732: 730: 727: 725: 722: 720: 717: 715: 712: 710: 707: 705: 702: 700: 699:Massachusetts 697: 695: 692: 690: 687: 685: 682: 680: 677: 675: 672: 670: 667: 665: 662: 660: 657: 655: 652: 650: 647: 645: 642: 640: 637: 635: 632: 630: 627: 625: 622: 620: 617: 615: 612: 610: 607: 605: 602: 600: 597: 594: 591: 590: 588: 584: 578: 575: 573: 570: 568: 565: 563: 560: 558: 555: 553: 550: 548: 545: 544: 542: 538: 534: 527: 522: 520: 515: 513: 508: 507: 504: 492: 490: 488: 486: 484: 482: 480: 478: 474: 469: 462: 460: 458: 456: 454: 452: 450: 448: 446: 444: 442: 440: 438: 436: 434: 432: 430: 428: 426: 424: 422: 420: 416: 413: 400: 396: 390: 388: 384: 379: 375: 374: 369: 363: 361: 357: 350: 346: 343: 342: 338: 336: 332: 328: 324: 320: 316: 312: 308: 304: 300: 296: 292: 274: 270: 266: 263: 257: 255: 251: 247: 243: 239: 238:Moscow, Idaho 235: 225: 223:Added to NRHP 221: 218: 215: 208: 204: 200: 196: 192: 181: 177: 173: 169: 164: 127: 123: 120: 119:Moscow, Idaho 116: 112: 91: 66: 56: 49: 44: 40: 36: 31: 24: 20: 799:South Dakota 789:Rhode Island 784:Pennsylvania 764:North Dakota 467: 402:. Retrieved 371: 333: 329: 325: 321: 317: 313: 309: 305: 301: 297: 293: 275: 271: 267: 258: 233: 231: 920:Other areas 880:Puerto Rico 714:Mississippi 629:Connecticut 150: / 137:117°00′20″W 125:Coordinates 1010:Categories 829:Washington 749:New Mexico 744:New Jersey 619:California 351:References 156: ( 134:46°43′34″N 839:Wisconsin 804:Tennessee 709:Minnesota 684:Louisiana 194:Architect 995:Category 824:Virginia 774:Oklahoma 754:New York 729:Nebraska 719:Missouri 704:Michigan 694:Maryland 679:Kentucky 659:Illinois 634:Delaware 624:Colorado 614:Arkansas 404:July 30, 339:See also 217:93001335 114:Location 941:Related 844:Wyoming 819:Vermont 724:Montana 664:Indiana 644:Georgia 639:Florida 609:Arizona 599:Alabama 285:⁄ 244:at the 184: ( 779:Oregon 734:Nevada 674:Kansas 649:Hawaii 604:Alaska 540:Topics 911:Palau 809:Texas 689:Maine 654:Idaho 410:With 179:Built 865:Guam 814:Utah 769:Ohio 669:Iowa 406:2018 232:The 186:1932 182:1932 171:Area 212:No. 1012:: 476:^ 418:^ 397:. 386:^ 376:. 370:. 359:^ 595:: 525:e 518:t 511:v 470:. 408:. 287:2 283:1 280:+ 278:4 188:) 160:)

Index

U.S. National Register of Historic Places

Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity House (Moscow, Idaho) is located in Idaho
Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity House (Moscow, Idaho) is located in the United States
Moscow, Idaho
46°43′34″N 117°00′20″W / 46.72611°N 117.00556°W / 46.72611; -117.00556 (Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity House)
93001335
Moscow, Idaho
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
University of Idaho
Colonial Revival style
National Register of Historic Places
Gamma Phi Beta
North American fraternity and sorority housing


"National Register Information System"
National Register of Historic Places
National Park Service


"National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Sigma Alpha Epsilon Fraternity House"
National Park Service
accompanying pictures





Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.