The McCosh Courtyard on the Campus and the Mather Sundial

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McCosh Hall was built in 1906 in the Tudor Gothic style of architecture. When constructed it was the largest building on the Campus. It contained four large lecture rooms, fourteen recitation rooms, and twenty-six smaller rooms especially planned for the preceptorial conferences. The Mather Sundial in McCosh Courtyard is a replica of the Turnbull Sundial (1551) at Corpus Christi College, Oxford. Princeton's sundial was given by Sir William Mather, governor of Victoria University in Manchester, England, "to symbolize the connection between Oxford and Princeton. . . [and] Great Britain and America." In 1907, Viscount James Bryce, then British ambassador to the United States, and Princeton President Woodrow Wilson presided over the dedication. The 20-foot column supports a globe topped by a pelican, the symbol of Corpus Christi College. Inscribed around the base are these words from Samuel Butler's "Hudibras":
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The McCosh Courtyard, McCosh Hall, Mather Sundial, Raleigh C. Gildersleeve, Tudor Gothic, Collegiate Gothic Architecture, Gothic Architecture, Campus of Princeton University, Princeton University, Ivy League, University, Princeton, Mercer County, The Delaware Region, New Jersey, NJ, Jersey, The Garden State

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