When landscape architects planned the area,
originally four blocks long
and only one and a half blocks wide, they emphasized the natural land
contours, tree clusters and vistas. By the 1960s the old Grove neared
capacity and the University added more lots to the east making the
Grove eight blocks long. Grove residents of today continue to enjoy the
aesthetic qualities of the original site plan: Long blocks with central
commons areas provide unobstructed views as well as convenient, safe
play places for children. Homes on the northern boundary of the
neighborhood overlook the 10th fairway of the golf course and wooded,
former streetcar line.
Setting aside land in the 1920s for faculty and staff housing was the
brainchild of University of Minnesota Vice President (and one-time
Grove resident) William Middlebrook. He reasoned the availability of
such housing would be a great asset in the recruitment and retention of
top-flight teachers and administrators.
Over the years, the Grove has
been home to famous residents and all ranks of university people. Notable residents have included:
- Margaret Davis, first female Regents Professor at the University of Minnesota
- Jerry Shepard, a former academic vice
president and distinguished consultant in electrical engineering
- Winston Close, along with his wife, Elizabeth, designed 14 of the homes
in the Grove
- Walter Heller, Regents Professor of Economics and
economic advisor to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson
- Bryce Crawford,
renowned physical chemist, a Regents Professor of Chemistry and dean of
the graduate school
- Alfred Nier, Regents Professor of Physics, and a
pioneer member of the team which developed the atomic bomb
- Adamson
Hoebel, Regents Professor of Anthropology, and former dean of the
College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Utah
- B. F. Skinner,
psychologist, and "father” of behavioral psychology in America
- Henry
Schmits, a distinguished agricultural scientist who became president of
the University of Washington in Seattle
- Bernie Bierman, a great
coach of Minnesota collegiate football
Because each single family home had to be designed by an architect with
a maximum ceiling on costs, no two houses are the same and every one
was specifically designed for its site. The cap on costs made it
impossible for any new arrival to build a house appreciably larger or
more luxurious than its neighbors. The initial cost was $10,000. By the
early 1950s it was $27,500 and by 1970, it had reached $48,500. Over
the six decades, the Grove houses, for all their architectural
differences, are pleasingly compatible.
The Grove represents the work of many distinguished residential
architects, several of whom have been associated with the University’s
School of Architecture. A partial list includes:
- William Ingemann
- Edwin
Lundie
- Rollin Chapin
- Roy Childs Jones
- Thodes Robertson
- Elizabeth
and Winston Close
- Robert Cerny
- Harlan McClure
- Carl Graffunder
- Frank
Kerr
- Ralph Rapson
- Tom Van House
- Joseph Nichols
- Richard Hammel
- Michael McGuire
- Thomas Horty
Because of the many architects
involved over the years, there is great architectural variety in the
Grove. Early houses were mostly Tudor or colonial styles. Later
structures tended toward modern functionalism, showing the strong
influence of the Bauhaus and the international style. All of the homes
are well designed and well built.
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