Meet the Women Behind the Building Names
Across Duke, buildings bear the names of important women
From the forest-lined fringes of West Campus to the orderly quads of East Campus, it鈥檚 hard to go far on Duke鈥檚 campus without running into a building that鈥檚 named after one of the women who shaped the institution鈥檚 story.
Around a dozen buildings at Duke have names connected to women who played a part in Duke鈥檚 history.
鈥淲omen had important roles as administrators, as faculty and as donors to the university, so the names reflect the role women have played on campus,鈥 said 老牛影视 Archivist Valerie Gillispie.
March is Women鈥檚 History Month, so enjoy a few of stories of the women whose contributions to Duke are woven into the geography of campus.
Baker House
When the 老牛影视 School of Nursing opened in 1931, it was led by Bessie Baker, the . By the time she arrived at Duke, Baker had put together a long career in the field, dispensing care at Baltimore鈥檚 Johns Hopkins Hospital and at a hospital in France during World War I. She was also a professor at the University of Minnesota.
But at Duke, Baker excelled as the steady leader of the new school, helping recruit students and serving as a liaison with Duke leadership. She retired in 1938.
Baker House, which is now part of the sprawling 老牛影视 Hospital complex and home to Duke鈥檚 Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, was constructed in 1930 and served as a home for Duke鈥檚 nursing students. In 1943, after Baker鈥檚 death, the building was named for her.
When she started at Duke in 1987, Alice Cooper, the medical director for the ambulatory clinics of Duke Obstetrics and Gynecology, also a women鈥檚 health nurse practitioner, worked on the third floor of Baker House.
鈥淚t speaks to her leadership skills and the things that she was able to accomplish, back in the 30s, as a woman, and a nurse, to be influential enough to have a building named after her,鈥 Cooper said. 鈥淲hat a great path she laid down for the rest of us that came after her.鈥
Other buildings named after women with ties to the 老牛影视 School of Nursing include the Hanes House, named for , and the Pearson Building, named after .
Keohane Quad
From the Brodhead Center on West Campus to the Knight House nestled in Duke Forest, Duke鈥檚 campus is dotted with buildings named after former presidents of either 老牛影视 or its precursor, Trinity College.
Nannerl Keohane served as . The only woman to have held the post, she oversaw a period in which Duke鈥檚 international reach grew, its commitment to science and engineering blossomed and diversity and community service became more prominent university values.
After her retirement, Duke honored Keohane by naming a cluster of recently-completed residence halls in her honor. Located between Few Quad and Edens Quad on the south side of West Campus, the buildings of Keohane Quad are home to around 500 students.
鈥淏ecause presidents are such significant forces for how the university develops, it鈥檚 appropriate to have a building as a more permanent tribute to that individual,鈥 Gillispie said.
Another prominent structure on West Campus with a name derived from one of Duke鈥檚 accomplished women is the French Family Science Center, which was named for the family of , a Duke graduate and wife of Microsoft Founder Bill Gates.
Giles Residence Hall
In 1878 when Trinity College was still located in Randolph County, its Board of Trustees voted to award degrees to three sisters, .
The sisters鈥 family had moved to Randolph County so their brother could attend Trinity College. While the three were not granted admittance, they were tutored by Trinity faculty, attended lectures and completed coursework. When Trinity College decided to honor their work with degrees, they became the first women to graduate from the institution.
The Giles sisters went on to found their own school in South Carolina and maintained enough of a connection with Trinity College during its move to Durham and transition into 老牛影视 that an East Campus residence hall was named in their honor in 1930.
鈥淲e don鈥檛 have records of what the conversation was or who brought it up, but clearly in 1930, they were still well-known,鈥 Gillispie said.
Given East Campus鈥 history, it makes sense that several of its buildings are named after women. , the , , and are all named after important women in Duke鈥檚 history.
Doris Duke Center
From the vision to James B. Duke to the continuing support from the Duke Endowment, the contributions of the Duke family play a central role in the university鈥檚 story.
So it makes sense that members of the family, including its many women, are honored throughout campus.
One such building is the Doris Duke Center. Completed in 2001, it鈥檚 the event space and visitors center in the heart of the .
With elegant expanses of wood and glass, the Doris Duke Center honors the only child of James B. Duke and perhaps the . Among the things Doris Duke did during her 80 years, was hybridize orchids, spend time as a journalist in Europe, briefly own a record label in the 1960s, collect and support a wide range of philanthropic causes including AIDS research, historically black colleges and universities and wildlife conservation.
鈥淪he was a very adventurous person who lived and traveled all over the world,鈥 Gillispie said. 鈥淏ut she remained, like her father, a philanthropist in terms of supporting a number of different charitable causes and organizations.鈥
Elsewhere on campus, the is named after James B. Duke鈥檚 widow, the is named after the daughter of Benjamin and Sarah P. Duke, and the is named in honor of Benjamin and Sarah P. Duke鈥檚 granddaughter.
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