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National Register of Historic Places

1975

On June 11, 1975, Florida Southern College was listed in the National Register of Historic Places. A dedication ceremony was held on February 16, 1977 to receive the honor and the accompanying plaque. Today, the plaque is found outside the Watson-Fine Administration buildings.

National Register of Historic Places Plaque

The Frank Lloyd Wright Campus of Florida Southern College. At Florida Southern College is located the largest collection of buildings on one site ever created by Frank Lloyd Wright. one of America's foremost architects. Wright's plan for the campus is the only tangible example of his community planning ideas, termed "Organic Architecture." His concept was to decentralize the city by distributing urban functions to rural areas and to utilize new technologies in the building trades. Wright's involvement at the campus was the result of urgings from Ludd M. Spivey, then president of the college. Wright insisted that the college's individual buildings reflect their environment through the use of "native materials all universally adapted to the uses of young life." Eighteen buildings, only seven of which were completed, were originally planned for the campus. The Annie Pfeiffer Chapel, begun in 1938, was the first to be built, and the Polk Science Building, completed in 1959 during the presidency of Charles T. Thrift, Jr., was the last. Later buildings on the campus were designed by Nils Schweizer, an eminent Florida architect and student of Wright. The Florida Southern College Architectural District was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. Sponsored By Florida Southern College in Cooperation with Department of State. F-275. 1976.