Washburn Shops, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Mass.

Dublin Core

Title

Washburn Shops, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Mass.

Subject

Washburn Shops; Worcester Polytechnic Institute--Buildings; Worcester Polytechnic Institute--History; Universities and Colleges--Massachusetts--Worcester; Washburn, Ichabod; Nuclear reactors;

Description

A postcard of the Washburn Shops at the Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Massachusetts from Institute Road. The Washburn Shops was built in 1868 along with Boynton Hall under the direction of Ichabod Washburn who died two months before completing the building. The building was specifically designed to be used for the practical training of students. The shops were run as a for-profit business with students making most of the products under the supervision of instructors. Types of products produced in the shops included screw machines, lathes, and drills. During the 1950's a 10 Kilowatt atomic reactor was constructed in the building that allowed for the study of the fundamentals of reactor operations. After many renovations, practical training is still the main purpose of the Washburn Shops today, making it the oldest engineering building still used for education.

Creator

A.P. Lundborg

Publisher

Date

1909

Relation

Is a part of the Worcester Polytechnic Institute History Collection. University Archives and Special Collections, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, George C. Gordon Library, Worcester, Massachusetts. http://www.wpi.edu/+library

Format

image/jpg

Language

en-US

Type

Image

Files

Collection

Citation

A.P. Lundborg, “Washburn Shops, Worcester Polytechnic Institute, Worcester, Mass.,” Digital Commonwealth , accessed May 17, 2013, http://www.digitalcommonwealth.org/items/show/1618.

Comments

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