Old Dwight Hall – Old Campus

Overview of Old Dwight Hall

Linsly-Chittenden Hall, often called LC, emerged in two stages as Yale expanded its academic facilities at the turn of the 20th century. The Linsly portion, completed in 1906, was designed by Charles C. Haight in a Collegiate Gothic style to house lecture rooms and humanities classrooms. The adjoining Chittenden section, finished in 1890 and designed by J. Cleaveland Cady, originally served as part of the University Library system, complete with reading rooms and book stacks. When Sterling Memorial Library opened in 1930, the building was repurposed to unify the two wings into a single academic complex, connected by the distinctive vaulted corridor that students still pass through today. Today, Linsly-Chittenden remains one of Yale’s busiest classroom buildings, and continues a long tradition of students both residing in and taking classes in Old Campus.

Then-and-Now at Old Dwight Hall

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!

Then Now
Then Now

Postcard Views of Old Dwight Hall

Click or tap any of the postcard photos in the below gallery to zoom-in and explore further.

Front and Back of Old Dwight Hall Postcards

Mouse-over or tap any of the below postcards to see what the other side looks like!