Baldwin Cottage
Date
1887-presentLocation
30 South Professor StreetArchitects/Collaborators
Weary & Kramer, Akron (architects)Doerzbach and Decker, Sandusky (builders)
Style
Richardsonian Romanesque
History
The construction of Baldwin Cottage, a small-dorm complement to stately Talcott which rose more or less simultaneously next door, began soon after the 1886 fire which destroyed the Second Ladies Hall. It was named for Elbert Baldwin, a Cleveland dry goods merchant from whom Adelia Field Johnston, Oberlin's leading woman administrator, extracted a gift of $20,000. The village paper announced that Baldwin would be done "in the Queen Anne style, with broken roof lines, with the effect of earlier colonial houses" -- language suggesting that wonderfully elastic range of "Queen Anne". Weary and Kramer's design reached for the informal intimacy of a cottage look through variety in massing, texture, and detail. The studied unexpectedness of Baldwin's shapes--its squat tower, its low double-arched entry porch, the broad and gentle slopes of its roof lines, the episodic placement of its windows and dormers--made it a local triumph in the art of organic irregularity popularized by Henry Hobson Richardson. The roofing material, a warm red diamond-shaped tile, introduced a theme that would govern the campus building projects for the next 45 years. Dark, rich woodwork helped carry a friendly "nook-and-cranny" mood through the interior, making Baldwin one of the most durably popular living places on the campus.[Taken from Geoffrey Blodgett, Oberlin Architecture, College and Town (Oberlin, OH: Oberlin College, 1985)]
Today Baldwin Cottage is the home of the Women’s and Trans* Collective, a close-knit student community that provides women and transgendered persons with a safe space for discussion, communal living, and personal development.
[Women and Trans* Collective, Resed Housing, Oberlin College, accessed May 26, 2015.]
For additional buildings by the architects Weary and Kramer, see Peters Hall, Shurtleff Cottage, Spear Library-Laboratory, and Talcott Hall.
Geolocation
Image Description
Color digital image © Oberlin College
(Oberlin College website, Women and Trans* Colllective)