This walking tour explores some of the buildings and other features on the Queens College campus that are named for individuals connected with the college.
Rep. Benjamin S. Rosenthal (1923-1983) represented northeast Queens in the U.S. Congress from 1962 until his death in January 1983. Born in Manhattan, Rosenthal attended New York City public schools, Long Island University and City College before serving in the U.S. Army during WWII. He received his law degree from Brooklyn Law School and was admitted to the bar in 1949. In 1962, Rosenthal won a special election to the Eighty-Seventh Congress to fill the vacancy caused when Rep. Lester Holtzman won a seat on the state Supreme Court; Rosenthal was then reelected to the 11 succeeding Congresses.
During his congressional tenure, Rosenthal was an early opponent of the Vietnam War and a champion of consumer protection causes. He was a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee and chairman of the Subcommittee for Commerce, Consumer, and Monetary Affairs.
The Benjamin S. Rosenthal Library is the main library on the Queens College campus and was named upon its opening in 1988 to honor Rep. Rosenthal. The 350,000-sq.-ft., six-story building also houses the school’s Art Library and Graduate School of Library and Information Studies. Its hilltop location provides striking views of the Manhattan skyline to the west. Rep. Rosenthal’s papers are housed in the library’s Department of Special Collections and Archives.
Benjamin Rosenthal Collection, Queens College Special Collections and Archives, https://archives.qc.cuny.edu/queenscollege/collections/show/1
Biographical Directory of the U.S. Congress, Benjamin S. Rosenthal, https://www.congress.gov/member/benjamin-rosenthal/R000442
James Chaney, Andrew Goodman and Michael (Mickey) Schwerner were three civil rights workers who were murdered in Mississippi in June 1964, where they were volunteering for the Freedom Summer Project. At the time of their deaths, Goodman was a student at Queens College and Schwerner’s brother, Steve Schwerner, was the director of the college’s counseling program.
The three men were primarily involved in registering Black voters, but on the day of their disappearance were investigating the burning of a Black church that had been used for voter registration. They were abducted near the town of Philadelphia, Mississippi, and the case was initially treated as a missing persons investigation. After two months, their bodies were discovered; members of the KKK as well as local law enforcement were charged with the killings, but only seven of 18 defendants were convicted, on lesser charges of conspiracy. However, the case was reopened in 2004 after new evidence came to light and one defendant, Edgar Ray Killen, was convicted of three counts of manslaughter. He died in prison in 2018 at the age of 92.
The Chaney-Goodman-Schwerner Clock Tower sits atop the Benjamin S. Rosenthal Library on the campus of Queens College. It was dedicated to the three men in 1989, shortly after the library's construction. A campaign to furnish the tower with a real bell carillon, rather than electronic chimes, was spearheaded by Queens College music professor David S. Walker, and a five-bell peal was commissioned and cast at the Royal Eijsbouts Bell Foundry in the Netherlands. The carillon was dedicated in November 1990.
The Andrew Goodman Foundation, https://andrewgoodman.org/
""Mississippi Burning" murders". CBS News. June 19, 2014. https://www.cbsnews.com/pictures/mississippi-burning-murders/10/ Retrieved May 3, 2022.
Queens College Clock Tower Bells Collection, Department of Special Collections and Archives, Queens College, City University of New York, https://qcarchives.libraryhost.com/resources/queens_college_clock_tower_bells_collection
The entrance to Hortense Powdermaker Hall on the campus of Queens College.
Dr. Persia Campbell (1898-1974) was a member of the Queens College economics faculty from the school's early years, joining the department in 1940. Born in Australia, Campbell attended the University of Sydney and the London School of Economics before earning her Ph.D. at Columbia University. Her main area of focus was consumer protection and in particular, promoting legislation against "bait advertising" and other forms of fraud. Throughout her career, Campbell served as an advisor on consumer affairs and other economic issues to Presidents Roosevelt, Kennedy and Johnson, and to the governors of California and New York. She was also a frequent expert witness on consumer protection matters at congressional hearings.
Campbell was named chair of the Queens College economics department in 1960 and held that position until her retirement in 1965. The dome that bears her name was constructed in 1962 as a special architectural feature of the Social Science Building (now Powdermaker Hall). In 1977, the dome was renamed to honor Campbell; it is primarily used as a lecture space.
"Persia Campbell, 75, Economist And Consumer Advocate, Dead," The New York Times, March 3, 1974, https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1974/03/03/97474462.html?pageNumber=51
"Persia Campbell, our woman at the United Nations," _Vida _(blog), Australian Women's History Network, March 14, 2017, http://www.auswhn.org.au/blog/persia-campbell/
Dr. Paul Klapper (1885-1952) was the first president and guiding force behind the establishment of Queens College. Born in Romania, Klapper came to the U.S. with his parents as a child and enrolled at City College at the age of 14. After receiving his A.B. degree, he taught in the New York City public schools and at City College, eventually earning an M.A. and Ph.D. from New York University. He became head of the education department at City College in 1917, and served as dean of the college from 1922 to 1937, when he was asked to lead the newly created Queens College.
Klapper personally selected the college’s first faculty, as well as the 400 students who enrolled in that first year. He led the college through its first decade, retiring in 1948. He then served as acting dean of teacher education for CUNY's five four-year colleges, and was a visiting professor at the University of Chicago from 1949 to 1951. He passed away in 1952 at the age of 66. Over the course of his career, Klapper also was a member of the board of trustees for The State University of New York, Brandeis University and The New York State Commission Against Discrimination. He received various honorary degrees from institutions including Yeshiva University, Columbia University and Queens College. His papers are housed in Queens College's Department of Special Collections and Archives.
Klapper Hall was built and dedicated in 1955 as the Paul Klapper Library, and served as the college's main library until the larger Rosenthal Library was constructed in 1988. In 1992, the building was renovated and renamed Klapper Hall; it now houses the school's art and English departments as well as the Godwin-Ternbach Museum.
Paul Klapper Collection, Department of Special Collections and Archives, Queens College, City University of New York, https://qcarchives.libraryhost.com/resources/paul_klapper_papers
Christina Tsatsakos and Joseph R. Brostek, _“_Places and Faces Special Feature," (undated), Department of Special Collections and Archives, Queens College, City University of New York, https://jstor.org/stable/community.29709170
Rathaus Hall on the campus of Queens College, 2022.
Kiely Hall on the campus of Queens College
Stone commemorating the former location of the Jamaica Academy on the Queens College campus. Walt Whitman taught at the Academy in 1839.
Dr. Lloyd T. Delany (ca. 1923-1969) was associate professor of educational psychology at Queens College. In February 1969, he was named interim director of the college's SEEK (Search for Education, Elevation, and Knowledge) Program after its previous director, Joseph Mulholland, resigned. Students in the program, who were almost exclusively Black and Puerto Rican, protested the fact that its teaching and administrative staff were almost entirely white, and demanded greater autonomy over the curriculum and operations of the program. They engaged in large, on-campus demonstrations that closed the college for two days. In June 1969 Delany was named SEEK's director of counseling, but he tragically died of a heart attack only several months into that position. Delany was also active in civil rights causes outside of Queens College, having been a leading figure in the fight to integrate the Malverne public schools on Long Island.
Delany Hall was built in 1925 and was known as the "D" Building until it was renamed in Delany's honor in 1993, following extensive renovations. It is currently the home of the college's SEEK and Africana Studies Programs.
Annie Tummino and Rachel Kahn, "Campus Unrest at 50: Commemorating the Legacy of Dissent at Queens College," The Academic Archivist, June 17, 2019, https://academicarchivist.wordpress.com/2019/06/17/campus-unrest-at-50-commemorating-the-legacy-of-dissent-at-queens-college/
"Dr. Lloyd Delany of SEEK Program," The New York Times, November 9, 1969, https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1969/11/09/89143521.html?pageNumber=86
"Dr. Lloyd T. Delany Dies; Civil Rights Leader," Hartford Courant, November 11, 1969, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/40523669/obituary-for-lloyd-t-delany-aged-46/
Christina Tsatsakos and Joseph R. Brostek, “Places and Faces Special Feature," undated, Queens College Special Collections and Archives, https://jstor.org/stable/community.29709170
Gregory Razran Hall on the campus of Queens College, July 2022.
Townsend Harris High School, August 2022.
https://www.britannica.com/biography/Townsend-Harris
Wikidata contributors, "Q7830177”, Wikidata, accessed December 14, 2023, https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q7830177
Wikidata contributors, "Q610626”, Wikidata, accessed December 14, 2023, https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q610626
“283205521,” OpenStreetMap, accessed December 14, 2023, https://www.openstreetmap.org/way/283205521