BRYANT COLLEGE
(Borrowed
from
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bryant_University)
Bryant University is
a private university,
located in Smithfield,
Rhode Island, U.S., that grants the degrees of
bachelor of arts, bachelor of science, and master's degrees in business,
taxation, accounting, communication, global environmental studies, and physician
assistant studies. Until August 2004, it was known as Bryant College. Bryant comprises the College of Arts and Sciences and
the College of Business, and is accredited by the New England Association of
Schools and Colleges and the AACSB International.
Butler Exchange & downtown Providence -
Bryant
University was founded in 1863 as a branch of a national school which originally
taught bookkeeping and methods of business communication and was named after
founders, John
Collins Bryant and Henry
Beadman Bryant. This chain of school is currently called Bryant
& Stratton College.
In 1916, the Rhode Island branch was sold and merged with the Rhode Island
Commercial School. Classes for Bryant and Stratton College were originally held
in the now demolished Butler Exchange building located in downtown Providence,
at 111
Westminster Street on Kennedy
Plaza. Bryant became non-profit in 1949 and offered its first
master's program in 1969.
College Hill -
From August 1,
1935 to 1971, Bryant College of Business Administration campus was located on
College Hill near Brown
University.
Housed first at "South Hall" at the corner of Hope Street and Young Orchard
Avenue, formally Hope Hospital, the college expanded into neighboring buildings.
The "South Hall" building was originally the 19th century home of a
manufacturing family Sprague. When the school relocated to Smithfield, it sold
the Providence campus
to Brown University. The property, 26 buildings on 10 acres of land, became
known as Brown's East Campus. The former South Hall became home to Brown's music
department, and is now called the Orwig Music Center
Smithfield -
In October 1967,
Earl S. Tupper, alumnus and inventor of Tupperware, donated his 428-acre
(1.73 km2) hillside estate to Bryant College for the creation of the new campus.
To thank Tupper for his generous gift, Bryant named the campus after him and
awarded him a second degree, an honorary Ph.D. in Humane Letters. In 1971, the
University moved to the new campus. The famous Bryant Archway was also
relocated. The old Emin Homestead and Captain Joseph Mowry homestead occupied
much of the land that makes up the present day Smithfield campus. The land was
purchased and farmed for three generations between the late 19th century and the
mid-20th century. Today, many descendants of the original Emin settlers still
live near the Bryant campus. The school also claims a handful of family members
as alumni and offers a scholarship for accounting students as a tribute to the
Emin family. Historical pictures of the Emin Homestead can still be found in the
Alumni house.
Bryant Archway tradition -
Students at
Bryant have a particular way of symbolizing the completion of their education:
walking through the archway. The story of the archway dates back to 1875. Isaac
Gifford Ladd, an associate of Charles
M. Schwab and
a famous U.S. steel tycoon, constructed a one million dollar building which
contained the iron arch on Young Orchard Avenue on the east side of Providence.
This building was meant to be a sign of his endearment to his newlywed wife
However, his wife expressed hatred for the structure which was named after her.
He took this as a personal rejection, and Ladd later took his own life. The
building remained unoccupied until Thomas Marsden transformed it into Hope
Hospital, which was part of Bryant College. To provide more space for classes,
an addition was constructed and Hope Hospital was renamed South Hall. Four years
later, prior to the school's move from Providence to Smithfield, the
wrought-iron arch at the entrance to South Hall was transported to the new
campus.
Today, the archway remains the only physical link to the Providence campus.
After the archway was transferred from the old campus, students immediately
began to avoid passing through this out-of-place structure. As a rumor had it,
walking through the archway before graduation mysteriously jeopardized chances
of graduating. Since this is quite a large price to pay for not following
tradition, most students opted not to take the chance, which has resulted in
worn paths around the arch. This tradition has shaped the behavior of thousands
of Bryant University students on Tupper campus for the past 30 years, and has
become a focal point in the legend and mystique of Bryant
CONCERT WE PRESENTLY KNOW ABOUT
DATE |
VENUE |
MAIN BAND |
SUPPORT |
AD |
TICKET |
PICTURES |
TAPE |
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February 25, 1972 |
Bryant College, Bryant Gym |
Yes |
The Blues Project |
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SET LIST |
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May 14, 1972 |
Bryant College, Bryant Gym |
Linda Ronstadt |
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October 13, 1972 |
Bryant College, Bryant Gym |
McKendree Spring |
Elf |
YES |
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October 14, 1972 |
Bryant College, Bryant Gym |
Canned Heat |
NRBQ |
YES |
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November 17, 1972 |
Bryant College, Bryant Gym |
James Montgomery Band |
Sage |
YES |
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