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University Historic District Walking Tour, Eastern Washington University
Item 13 of 20
Acquired through State and Federal funding, Hudson Hall was moved from the Kaiser ship building operation at Vancouver, Washington. It opened in 1947 to house veterans of World War II attending school on the G.I. Bill. This campus ghost stood where the mall is today.

This "Hudson House" was dismantled in Vacouver, Washington and reassembled on campus as Hudson Hall to house single WWII veterans attending school.

This "Hudson House" was dismantled in Vacouver, Washington and reassembled on campus as Hudson Hall to house single WWII veterans attending school.

Hudson Hall 1960

Hudson Hall 1960

Hudson houses for Kaiser employees at Vancouver, Washington during World War II.

Hudson houses for Kaiser employees at Vancouver, Washington during World War II.

EWC campus and town 1960. Hudson/Garry Hall in near view.

EWC campus and town 1960. Hudson/Garry Hall in near view.

Hudson Hall 1955.

Hudson Hall 1955.

Following World War II, colleges across the country prepared for a large influx of single and married veterans taking advantage of the G.I. Bill. With federal and state assistance, Cheney met the need through war surplus trailers and buildings. The post-war expansion that began with Trailerville added Hudson Hall in late 1946.

The origin of the name “Hudson House” is still a mystery. These large wood-framed apartment buildings, called Hudson houses, were erected early in the war by Kaiser at their Vancouver, Washington ship yard. At the ship yard, a typical Hudson House was home to 36 to 40 single men. As a dormitory for the college, initial plans ranged from 386 to 500 single men.

In September 1946, Eastern Washington College awarded a contract to Nettletson & Baldwin of Seattle in the amount of $236,500 to move the large, five-wing, Hudson house from Vancouver and set it up. The cost of "knocking down" the structure into panels and moving it to Cheney was $230,000, construction of foundations was $19,000, and an item for overtime of $7,500 was included to assure the completion of two wings within 60 days, or by November 15, 1946. The entire job was to be finished by January 1, 1947.

The dormitory was erected on campus about where the central mall is today at the ghost of the intersection of F and 9th streets. The site was formerly the PE (Physical Education) field. It was next to Trailerville and a dining hall that had been the mess hall at Baxter General Hospital in Spokane.

Hudson Hall was divided in 1958 between single and married students. The eastern half of the building became Garry Hall, with seven apartments for married students. The entire building was demolished in the late 1960s.

Cheney Free Press
Kinnickinik 1946, 1947, 1958