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Virtual Historical Tour
31. Seaton Hall
Named
for former president, John Seaton, this was Albion's first men's
dormitory. It now houses men and women.
Prior to its construction in 1949,
men lived in boarding houses, fraternity houses and club houses such as
the Goodrich Club, which still owns its own house. Laying the
cornerstone for Seaton Hall in 1948 marked the end of a century-long
wait for men's housing at the College. The $850,000 necessary for
building Seaton Hall were generously supplied by the Kresge Foundation.
(Fennimore, pp.563-64)
A
former Dean of Men, in his first year at Albion, Seaton lived in the
Resident Coordinator's apartment with his wife. She owned a small, white
French poodle with pink ribbons in its hair and would daily walk the dog
in the courtyard behind Baldwin and between Seaton and Whitehouse Halls.
The male students, wishing to be friendly but not knowing the dog's
name, would open their windows and call out to the dog, "Hi, Fifi! How's
Fifi today?" After a few days of this, the Dean called a meeting of all
the residents of the dorms. Crowded into a lounge, the young men were
scolded, "If I hear any of you," said the Dean, "yelling at my wife
again, you will be in big trouble." The young men were baffled, as none
of them had ever yelled at the Dean's wife.
It turned out that the Dean's wife
was named "Fifi", and the dog was "Margaret".
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