Background Thomas Lamb Eliot, who would later become Eliot Hall's namesake in 1935, Having met
Simeon Gannett Reed and his wife
Amanda, Reed College's namesakes, through his work as a minister, he wrote to the Reeds in 1887 with the idea of creating a liberal institution of arts and sciences. Although the Reeds passed away before the school was officially founded, Amanda left Eliot $2 million in her will; plans for developing the school began in 1906.
Development, construction, and later history Eliot approached architect A. E. Doyle to help design the campus buildings, including Eliot Hall, under the name of the Arts and Science Building. After going through various plans and designs, he decided that the first few buildings, including Eliot Hall, would be built in the Collegiate Gothic style based on St. John's College in Oxford and the Tudor Gothic style. Construction began in 1912. Eliot Hall was one of the first buildings constructed for Reed College. It was designed to function as the campus' primary academic building when the school opened. It originally contained the administration office, lecture rooms, and laboratories for the various fields of study, and later, a museum, library, and chapel. It held various departments such as biology, chemistry, physics, and graphic design and was named the Arts and Science Building. Since the campus was set to open in September 1912 for the upcoming school year, Doyle had roughly eight months to complete construction. While most of the building was completed in time for the school's grand opening, the chapel was left unfinished and would not be completed until 1913. The building was renamed in honor of Thomas Eliot in 1935 and was remodeled in the same year. It was designated a Portland historic landmark in 1970.
Remodeling The building's interior has been subject to several remodeling projects. The first change was the library, which was moved in 1930 and became its own separate building. As attendance grew and other buildings were added to the campus, most of the science departments were relocated, including the biology and physics departments, which were relocated in 1949 and 1959, respectively. The fourth floor and east entrance were remodeled in 1964—areas in which most of the offices and laboratories had been were removed. In 1966, the chemistry department was relocated and replaced with a print shop and a calligraphy studio as part of the new graphic design program. == Description ==