Davenport College
Overview of Davenport College
Davenport College opened in 1933 as part of Yale’s first-wave residential college system, and was named for John Davenport, the Puritan minister who co-founded New Haven in 1638. Its site on York Street was a dense, irregular block of small commercial buildings, boarding houses, service shops and brick row structures — all cleared to make way for what James Gamble Rogers then reimagined as an inward-facing “town within walls.” Architecturally, Davenport is more eclectic than many of its Gothic siblings: its principal façades are Georgian Revival, while the west quadrangle has deliberately London-townhouse / Mews-street energy. This design that remains a cornerstone of Davenport — half-urban, half-collegiate — is in fact a direct inheritance from what was in Davenport’s footprint before Yale built the college.
Then-and-Now at Davenport College
In the below, the view on the left is what appears in one of the postcards from the collection, and the view on the right is a photo taken of the same camera angle in 2025. Use the slider to see how these views compare more than a century apart!
Postcard Views of Davenport College
Click or tap any of the postcard photos in the below gallery to zoom-in and explore further.
Front and Back of Davenport College Postcards
Mouse-over or tap any of the below postcards to see what the other side looks like!