Forest History Society Photograph Collection
Images from the Theodore S. Woolsey, Jr., Auxiliary Photograph Collection / Yale23_CthEAD

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Yale23_Cth

Image ID:  Yale23_C
Digital Image Size (in pixels):  300 x 232 pixels
Image Scan Resolution:  75 dpi
Original Image Size:  3 12/16" x 4 8/16" B/W print
Image Title:  [Marsh Hall at Yale University.]
Image Caption:  [Yale University's Marsh Hall, located at 360 Prospect Street in New Haven, Connecticut. The building's architecture has distinctive ornate, decorative touches. In this image, the structure rests on a manicured lawn and has vines growing up many of its columns and walls. Yale University named Marsh Hall in honor of the former owner, paleontologist Othneil Charles Marsh (1831-1899), who bequeathed the brownstone residence to the university upon his death. The hall was the headquarters of the Yale Forestry School under the direction of Henry Solon Graves (1871-1951) from 1900 to 1926. It was designated a national historic landmark in 1965.]

[Image from the Theodore S. Woolsey, Jr., Auxiliary Photograph Collection held by the Forest History Society Archives in Durham, North Carolina. Theodore Salisbury Woolsey, Jr., (1879-1933) was a 1903 graduate of the Yale Forestry School. In 1900 he began working summers for the U.S. Forest Service while an undergraduate student at Yale University. He worked full-time with the agency from 1903 to 1915, when he left the Forest Service to serve as a major in the U.S. Army's 10th Engineers in France during World War I. As a staff officer Woolsey was responsible for purchasing timber tracts from which the engineers produced lumber to meet the needs of the American Expeditionary Force. After the war he began a career as a consulting forester, settling down to live with his wife and children in his home state of Connecticut. Woolsey devoted many years to studying forestry movements in France, Corsica, Germany, Algeria, Tunisia, and India. He was the author of several forestry texts and numerous journal articles, was actively involved in local and national forestry and conservation organizations, and at various times throughout his career was an infrequent lecturer at Yale's forestry school. The images in the Woolsey Collection presumably document forestry activities observed, directed, researched, or undertaken by Woolsey during the first or second decade of the twentieth century.]

Image Date:  [no date]
Photographer:  [Woolsey, Theodore S., Jr.]
Use Restrictions:  Permission from the Forest History Society required for any use of this image.
Repository Contact Information:  Forest History Society, Inc.; 701 William Vickers Ave., Durham, NC 27701; Tel.: (919) 682-9319; Fax: (919) 682-2349.