Popular Culture Review Vol. 22, No. 1, Winter 2011 | Page 95

The Hall of Fame for Great Americans: A Call for Ending its Comatosis or Hibernation The world’s first organization that has been specifically designated as a “Hall of Fame” was established in New York City in 1900 (MacCracken, 1900; MacCracken, 1901). The Hall of Fame for Great Americans honors 102 Americans. It has served as a model for hundreds of other “halls of fame,” the most prominent being baseball’s Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York, established in 1939. While the Hall of Fame for Great Americans remains the original icon in a history of popular culture museums visited by millions each year, the Hall today is little known, visited by scant few, and in a state of both physical and organizational decline. This article is a call to reawaken this institution from, depending on how you see it, comatosis or hibernation. The Hall of Fame came about by accident. Henry MacCracken, President of New York University (NYU), wanted to establish a new campus in a rural area of the Bronx. He found 50 acres on a bluff rising above the Harlem River. There he orchestrated the construction of an entirely new campus. At the same time he retained NYU’s Washington Square location in lower Manhattan for his professional schools. His initial plan called for moving the main old campus building, the University Hall, brick and stone by brick and stone, to the Bronx, but it was soon realized that such a project was cost prohibitive. Hence he set about to build what was essentially an entirely new campus, although some structures in the neighborhood of the new site were converted into university facilities (MacCracken, 1900, pp. 2-3; MacCracken, 1901, p. 563). The building project had several buildings surrounding a centerpiece structure combination administration library building. This building along with the others was designed by the world renowned architect Stanford White. The construction was made possible by a large donation (over $2 million) from— Helen Miller Gould (Mrs. Finley J. Shepard) the daughter of business tycoon Jay Gould. White and MacCracken desired very much to exploit the visual effects of the campus atop the parcel of land in the rural-suburban area of the Bronx that took on the name of University Heights. They agreed that the administrative library building, to be known as the Gould Library, should be located as near to the edge of the bluff as it could be (New York Times, March 8, 1900; Rubin, 1997). White informed MacCracken that such a building location would require a massive retaining wall. Otherwise the library structure might slip over the precipice. The placement of such a wall would create room for a large basement in the building, but it would also create somewhat of an eyesore defining the glorious building above it, as people looking up toward the campus from the west would see only the massive wall. The retaining wall needed something at