silent willie
NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. – Rutgers’ Class of 2008 will graduate in a historic setting that dates back to the earliest days of the university. On May 21, a sea of 11,000 neatly positioned chairs covering the expanse of Voorhees Mall will be filled with graduates and guests celebrating Rutgers’ 242nd commencement. 

James Neilson (Rutgers College 1866), an attorney and landowner who was active in city affairs, owned most of the land on which the mall sits. Neilson served as a Rutgers trustee for 51 years and was among the founders of what would become the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station. His family had roots in the city of New Brunswick as far back as the 1730s. Neilson’s father watched George Washington travel through New Brunswick on the way to his 1789 inauguration as president in New York City.

Neilson donated the land in the area of the mall, as well as land that later became home to Douglass College and the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, and also Wood Lawn, the former family residence that houses the Eagleton Institute of Politics. As the Old Queen’s campus expanded in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, additional parcels were acquired from other landowners, and the campus, then called Neilson Campus, took shape.

The name was changed to Voorhees Campus in July 1974 to honor Tracy S. Voorhees (Rutgers College 1911), longtime trustee and member of the Rutgers Board of Governors from 1957 to 1965. During the 1930s and early 1940s, Voorhees served as an adviser to federal agencies on issues ranging from refugee aid to food relief in occupied areas following World War II. He also was a surgeon general and judge advocate general. Voorhees played a key role in helping to relocate more than 32,000 Hungarian refugees to Camp Kilmer (a World War II military facility that later became the Livingston Campus) for resettlement from 1956 to 1957.

Noteworthy buildings on the mall include Voorhees Hall, site of an early Rutgers library and named for benefactor Ralph Voorhees, and New Jersey Hall, which opened in 1889 and once housed the state Agricultural Experiment Station and also the chemistry and biology departments.

Milledoler Hall, built in 1910, was originally the Chemistry Building. It is named for the Rev. Philip Milledoler, professor of didactic theology in the New Jersey Theological Seminary, trustee of Queen’s College and president of Rutgers from 1825 to 1840. When Milledoler became president, the name of the college was changed from Queen’s College to Rutgers College in honor of Col. Henry Rutgers of New York City, a Revolutionary War hero.  

Murray Hall, the former home of the College of Engineering, opened in 1909 at the time of the centennial of Old Queen’s. The building is named for David Murray, professor of mathematics and astronomy at Rutgers College, 1863 to 1876, and college trustee, 1892 to 1905. Later additions around the mall include Van Dyck Hall, opened in 1928 and named for Rutgers College Dean Francis Cuyler Van Dyck; the Graduate School of Education and the Language Lab, both opened in 1961; and Scott Hall, opened in 1963, which carries the name of a former Rutgers president, Austin Scott, who served from 1891 to 1906.

A bronze statue of William the Silent stands near Seminary Place. Known as “Silent Willie,” the statue of the Count of Nassau, Prince of Orange and national hero of the Netherlands (1533 to 1584) was unveiled in 1928, a gift to the college from Fenton B. Turck and Lenor F. Loree.

Rutgers alumni killed or declared missing during the war in Southeast Asia are honored with a monument near Scott Hall, off College Avenue. Mason Gross, Rutgers’ 16th president, is remembered with a monument facing College Avenue near Milledoler Hall. Original stones from the Sign of the Red Lion, a tavern where the earliest classes of what was then Queen’s College were taught, are incorporated into a bench near the center of the mall. 

The mall is also home to 55 mature American elms. Regular maintenance has spared the trees from the ravages of Dutch elm disease, a fungus infection that decimated the American elm tree population starting in the 1930s. Another seven disease-resistant varieties have been planted as replacement trees.

Media Contact: Steve Manas
732-932-7084 ext. 612
E-mail: smanas@ur.rutgers.edu