Grizzoola said:
That white 3-story building on the NE corner of Main was a "temporary" for classrooms for the returning vets from WWII, financed by the GI Bill. I attended classes in that bldg in late '50s.
That white three story building was one of the first four buildings constructed on the UM Campus. I believe it may have been the first one built after Main Hall was completed. It was the original Campus Gymnasium.
UM HHP Prof Gene Burns is working on a book on the history of "Athletics" at the University of Montana and I was talking to Gene a couple of weeks ago about it. He wondered if I recalled the building, since he is trying to "run down" when it was dismantled. I took my first classes on Campus in the summer of 1962, and said I don't recall it being there. Mark Behan had told me that the Botany Greenhouse and Lab facility had been built in 1956, and so my guess was that the old Gym was torn down then or prior to that time. Anyone remember?
As it appears in the Dornblaser photo, the "backside" is somewhat nondescript. The front, however, was designed like a castle, with parapets and the whole nine yards. University Archives in fact refers to it as "the Castle" for the two or three photos they have of it from the Oval side. Gene says it was known for being very poorly heated. Unlike most of the buildings on campus, it was a wood frame construction.
When the new University Gym (now called Schreiber) was built in 1922 as part of the Dornblaser Field complex, the old Gym was converted to classroom space. The new Gym was really something by comparison, and remains an outstanding athletic facility to this day even though relegated to auxiliary gym use. Entrance to Dornblaser was from the north doorway of the new gym, and the teams would run onto the field from that door. The handsome ceramic "UM" emblem on the roof of Schreiber was meant to identify Dornblaser as "UM" and faced the Field, and as the teams entered the field, they did so beneath that emblem. So, it was designed as a nice "framing" for the UM team entrances, like the inflatable tunnels are used today. The ceramic "UM" is still on the roof above that doorway, although now it faces a parking lot. It is the last tangible evidence of the old Dornblaser Field.
As Gene noted, there is an odd dearth of material on that old Gym, which is odd because the few surviving photos of it shows a remarkable architecture that seems like it would have attracted a lot of attention.