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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHapner Hall (24GA0336)_Final MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD For the Montana National Register of Historic Places Program and State Antiquities Database Montana State Historic Preservation Office Montana Historical Society PO Box 201202, 1410 8 th Ave Helena, MT 59620-1202 Property Address: Montana State University Campus W. Cleveland between 7 th & 8 th Ave. Historic Address (if applicable): Same City/Town: Bozeman Site Number: 24GA0336 (An historic district number may also apply.) County: Gallatin Historic Name: Hapner Hall Original Owner(s): Montana State College of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts Current Ownership Private Public Current Property Name: Hapner Hall Owner(s): Montana State University - Administration Owner Address: 201 Main Hall / PO Box 172440 Bozeman, MT 59717-2440 Phone: 406-994-2001 Legal Location PM: Montana Township: 2S Range: 5E NW ¼ NW ¼ NE ¼ of Section: 13 Lot(s): Block(s): 12 Addition: Capital Hill Year of Addition: 1890 USGS Quad Name: Bozeman Year: 1987 Historic Use: Residence Hall (Women's) Current Use: Same Construction Date: 1959 Estimated Actual Original Location Moved Date Moved: UTM Reference www.nris.mt.gov/topofinder2 NAD 27 or NAD 83(preferred ) Zone: 12 Easting: 496316 Northing: 5057340 National Register of Historic Places NRHP Listing Date: Historic District: Montana State University-Bozeman HD NRHP Eligible: Yes No Date of this document: December 31, 2012 Form Prepared by: Jessie Nunn / Consultant Address: 600 Meadowlark Lane, Livingston, MT 59047 Daytime Phone: 406-208-8727 MT SHPO USE ONLY Eligible for NRHP: X yes no Criteria: X A B X C D Date: 10/7/2013 Evaluator: Kate Hampton Comments: Contributor to the Montana State University Historic District MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 2 Architectural Description Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION Architectural Style: Other: If Other, specify: Modern Property Type: Education Specific Property Type: Residence Hall Architect: Architectural Firm/City/State: Cushing, Terrell and Associates / Billings, MT Builder/Contractor: Company/City/State: Haggerty-Messmer Co. (general) / Bozeman, MT; Midland Plumbing & Heating (plumbing) / Billings, MT; Bozeman Electric Co. (electrical) / Bozeman, MT Source of Information: University Records, 58-0001 Hapner Hall Setting and Location Within the overall campus plan, Hapner Hall, Hannon Hall (1955), the Quadrangle (1935) and Hamilton Hall (1911) create a cluster of what were originally women’s dormitories around the 1926 Woman’s Building (Herrick Hall). Single family houses are located immediately to the north across Harrison Street and a cluster of mid-20th century men’s dormitories including Lewis and Clark Hall (now the Johnstone Center) and Langford Hall are found to the northwest. Between the Johnstone Center and the Chemistry and Biochemistry Labs, and immediately west of Hapner Hall across S. 8 th Avenue, are an expansive lawn and a smaller parking lot. Summary Completed in 1959, Hapner Hall was designed in the Modern style by the Billings, Montana architectural firm of Cushing, Terrell and Associates (later CTA). It is a brick-clad, reinforced concrete building with a 102’ x 104’ one-story central section containing lobbies, dining and kitchen space flanked by elongated 44’ x 242’ three-story wings that house dorm rooms. This configuration creates a distinctive “H”-shaped footprint. Both the central section and the wings have flat roofs covered with a synthetic membrane. Brick-colored metal fascia covers the roof-wall junction unless otherwise noted. The wings set approximately 36’ from the central section are connected by 12’ wide corridors. Because the site slopes from south to north, the wings are divided into two separate sections with the first story of the southern sections at the same level as the second story of the northern sections. In addition, the slope causes the central section to transition into two stories at its northern end and the connecting corridors to be one story on their south elevation and two stories on their north elevation. The wings extend approximately 27’ farther north and approximately 90’ farther south than the central section. A “U”-shaped drive routes traffic from Cleveland Street to the main entrance on the south façade of the central section. Mature coniferous and deciduous trees are found within the “U” and in front of the building in various places. Central Section and Connecting Corridors The main entrance to Hapner Hall was altered extensively in 2012. Originally, the south elevation of the central section was basically symmetrical, with a double door entrance centered within an almost full height window wall flanked by solid brick walls. A flat-roofed concrete canopy protecting the walk leading to the entrance extended approximately 20’ south of the façade. The recent renovation is sympathetic to the Modern style of the building, but creates an asymmetrical façade. The recessed entrance is now an oversized vestibule, with the double glass doors located on the west end of the modern window wall. A wide overhanging roof structure clad in modern stucco-like paneling is supported on the east by a square column clad in the same material and thin metal posts to the west. A floating metal canopy located about three-fourths of the way up the window wall is supported by the thin metal posts. It begins between the building and the eastern column and extends to the west end of central section’s south elevation. “HAPNER HALL” in individual metal letters sits atop the canopy above the entrance. The original solid brick walls continue to flank the new entrance. Red and yellow face brick laid in running bond was used here and throughout Hapner Hall unless otherwise specified. The rear (north) elevation of the central section is a solid brick wall punctured only by a handful of entrances, windows and vents. On its eastern end there is a small concrete loading dock with double metal doors protected by a gable-roofed canopy. A louvered metal vent is located over the loading dock and a double metal walk-in door is centered on this elevation at grade. Two aluminum windows with a stationary pane flanked by two light casement units are located in the upper portion of the western side of the elevation. The side elevations of the central section are very similar and can be divided into three sections: a one-story brick section south of the connecting corridors, a central window wall section, and another brick section to the north. On the west elevation, the southern brick section contains a single walk-in door. The window wall section extends almost the entire height of the building and contains seven columns of equal width divided into four rows of lights. Rows alternate between tall panels of glass and slender panels of opaque “spandrelite.” Two horizontally-arranged lights are located in the lower portion of the glass panel rows in columns two, four and six, except in the lower row of the second column from the south, which contains a glass door and sidelight. The northern brick section contains three evenly-spaced aluminum windows with two light casement units flanking a stationary pane on the second MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 3 Architectural Description Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 story and an identical window in the southern bay of the first story. On the east elevation, the southern section has a small window wall on its southern end containing a two light column and a tall glass panel. This elevation’s window wall section begins well above grade (resting on a brick wall), but contains the same configuration as that found on the west elevation. The only exception is that there is no door. The northern section contains only one aluminum window, a stationary pane flanked by casement units centered in the second story. The corridors connecting the wings to the central section of Hapner Hall are actual two stories, with the lower story being below grade on the southern elevation. Both corridors are clad in face brick and contain two sets of windows on their south and north elevations. On the south elevation, the window panels include two horizontally-arranged lights below a large stationary pane. The north elevation windows have the same configuration on both stories, separated by a slender row of opaque “spandrelite.” Because windows are located directly across from each other, the corridors have an open feeling. The corridors are located approximately 35’ feet from the south elevation of the central section and enter the wings in their center where they split into separate sections. East and West Dormitory Wings As previously discussed the east and west wings of Hapner Hall are separated into two sections, with the first story of the south sections at the same level as the second story of the north sections due to the slope of the site. Stair towers are found on all four corners of the building and in the center of the outer elevations (the west elevation of the west wing and the east elevation of the east wing.) The stair towers are the same height as the wings, but protrude approximately 3’ 4” outward from the side elevations. In all six towers, the north and south facing walls are filled with opaque glass creating the illusion of an open space. The lights in the stair towers are arranged so that one or two small lights are located at each landing and at the top, while larger lights fill each story. Aluminum-framed glass doors under the opaque glass offer access on the south elevation of both towers, however, the other stair towers are strictly for interior stairs. The south and north elevations of both wings are virtually identical. Excepting the stair towers, the south elevations are solid brick walls. On the north elevations, there are centered, recessed entrances with a single aluminum-framed glass door and sidelights. All four side elevations of the east and west wings are also nearly identical. Each contains nine recessed bays in each section, containing an aluminum window with a large stationary light flanked by two light casement units on the three stories. Spandrel sections between the windows are created with nine stack courses of stretcher brick. The spandrel brick is the same color and size as that used on the main building, but has a different texture and a darker mortar. On the inner elevations, the sections are divided by the corridors connecting the wings to the central section of the building. Metal doors on the north wall of the southern sections offer access to the roof of the lower northern sections. MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 4 History of Property Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 HISTORY OF PROPERTY Development of Montana State University Campus Montana State University was founded on February 16, 1893 (four years after statehood) as Montana’s land grant college under the Morrill Act of 1862. It has the distinction of being Montana’s first legislatively-created public university, with the University of Montana in Missoula being created the following day. Initially called the Agricultural College of the State of Montana, the new college was situated on a 200-acre site, part of which had been platted as the Capital Hill Addition in a (failed) bid for the State Capital. Bozeman citizens raised funds to purchase half the land, and Gallatin County donated the other half, which included the County poor farm. The first purpose-built building on campus was the Agricultural Experiment Station (Taylor Hall) constructed in 1894. Main Hall (or Montana Hall), the centerpiece of the campus, was completed in 1898. The construction of the Neo-classical Revival style Agricultural Building (Linfield Hall) in 1907 further illustrated the primary role of agriculture at Montana State. In 1913, the college was renamed the Montana State College of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts (MSC). The college anticipated a period of expansion after World War I, and contracted with Montana architect, George Carsley, and nationally-known landscape architect, Cass Gilbert, to develop a campus plan, now known as the “1917 George Carsley / Cass Gilbert Plan.” This plan, which exhibited a formal Beaux-Arts symmetry, was adopted by the Montana State Board of Education in 1920 and guided campus development until the outbreak of World War II. Its implementation was assisted by a $5 million bond to fund building development programs on all of Montana’s campuses. At MSC this resulted in the construction of several Italian Renaissance Revival buildings, including Roberts Hall, Traphagen Hall, Lewis Hall, Harrick Hall, Romney Gymnasium and the Heating Plant. MSC continued to grow and evolve during the Great Depression and Word War II. This was spurred in part by the growth of the Extension Service under the New Deal’s Agricultural Adjustment Administration, an increase in unemployed students who enrolled in the years from 1932 to 1939 and expanded military training (including a flight school) during World War II. The 1935 “Quads,” a women’s dormitory financed through the Works Progress Administration, and the oldest portion of the Student Union, completed in 1940, were the era’s most significant additions to campus. Both were designed by Bozeman architect, Fred F. Willson, in the Tudor Revival style. Slight deviations from the 1917 George Carsley / Cass Gilbert Plan during the mid-1940s resulted from a desire for new buildings alongside a need to curb paving and heating costs by reducing the space between buildings. Along with colleges and universities across the nation, MSC expanded to accommodate students attending college under the “GI Bill” after World War II. The square footage of campus buildings doubled in the following decades. At this time, further departures were also made from the 1917 George Carsley / Cass Gilbert Plan as growth demanded expansion beyond its boundaries and within its open spaces. The Renne Library (1949) and the small Danforth Chapel (1952), MSC’s first Modern style building, were the era’s earliest additions to campus but several others followed during the 1950s and early 1960s. Four Mid-Century Modern dormitories were added to the northern end of campus and new academic buildings, including Reid Hall and the Math-Physics Building (AJM Johnson Hall), were erected in open spaces south of Garfield Street. Several older buildings also received significant Modern style additions, including Linfield and Lewis Halls. The result of this new construction was a campus showcasing a dynamic blend of revivalist and modernist styles. The college was re-named Montana State University (MSU) in 1965, and the high-rise dormitories (Hedges and Roskie Halls) that would symbolize the modern era were completed by 1967. More buildings were added in the 1970s as MSU replaced all of its temporary frame buildings with permanent structures. Growth slowed during the 1980s through the beginning of the 21 st century in the core campus area, although a few new buildings (Visual Communications, the EPS Building and the Chemistry & Biochemistry Building) were added. Many older buildings have also undergone significant alterations in recent decades. Perhaps the greatest addition to campus during the contemporary period was Centennial Mall along what was once Garfield Street. In providing a strong east-west linear focus, the well-landscaped pedestrian mall was actually a return to the axial arrangement of 1917 George Carsley / Cass Gilbert Plan. Today the MSU campus represents a blend of early formal planning, post-war expansion and contemporary buildings that respond to current needs. It offers an excellent example of the evolution of campus planning in Montana. (Burlingame, in passim; Painter, Montana Historic Property Record Form for Langford Hall.) MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 5 History of Property Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 Campus Housing in Post-World War II Era To finance the construction of dormitories at Montana State College (MSC), President Ronald R. Renne established an “open end” funding scheme in 1954, in which: …all revenue producing buildings, including dormitories and the student union, as well as student building fees were grouped together, with all bonds sharing the same revenue. This made the bonds more attractive to buyers and larger amounts could be borrowed at lower interest rates.” (Burlingame, 190). Such creative financing was necessary because the Montana Legislature and State Board of Education refused to fund the construction of revenue-producing buildings. The successful completion of Lewis & Clark Hall (a men’s dormitory) and Hannon Hall (a women’s dormitory) in 1955 with a privately-financed $4.6 million bond proved the effectiveness of President Renne’s “open end” policy, and established the pattern through which future dormitories would be funded. (Nunn, Hannon Hall Montana Historic Property Record Form). Hannon Hall and Lewis & Clark Hall were a vast improvement over the temporary, barracks-style Quonset huts that typified student housing (especially of men) in the immediate post-World War II era, but by the spring of 1958 enrollment projections suggested MSC would again be without adequate dormitory space in the near future. If the recent past was any indication, MSC could certainly expect continued growth. Enrollment had grown from 1,951 in 1952 to 3,843 in the fall of 1958, an increase of just over 50% in a six year period. (MSU Website, Enrollment History). The anticipated pressure on campus housing required another round of dormitory construction only four years after Hannon Hall and Lewis & Clark Hall were completed. This construction included a women’s dormitory (Hapner Hall) between 7 th and 8 th Avenue and Cleveland and Harrison Streets (northwest of Hannon Hall) in 1959 and a men’s dormitory (Langford Hall) immediately west of Lewis and Clark Hall in 1960. Hapner Hall The enrollment of women at MSC, while still significantly trailing male students, had grown an average of 13% during the 1950s and it was expected 635 women would need housing in the fall of 1958. Unfortunately, only 611 women could be accommodated in the available dormitories (Hamilton Hall, The Quads and Hannon Hall) and sorority houses, even with “the use of guest rooms, recreational rooms, and some doubling up in large rooms.” (Minutes, 3/17/1958). With an expected 700 women needing housing by 1959, the situation needed immediate action. MSC took its case to the Montana State Board of Education, who approved “Item 165-214: Financing and Construction of a Women’s Residence Hall, Montana State College,” at their March 17, 1958 meeting. The resolution authorized President Renne to arrange financing under the “open end provisions of the 1954 Bond Issue Indenture,” and for the Governor to appoint an architect for the project. (Minutes, 3/17/195). Cushing, Terrell and Associates, the Billings, Montana architectural firm responsible for Hannon Hall, was appointed to design the new women’s dormitory. Construction began in the summer of 1958, with Haggerty-Messmer Construction Company of Bozeman receiving the general contract and Midland Plumbing & Heating of Billings and the Bozeman Electric Company receiving the plumbing and electrical contracts, respectively. Work apparently proceeded without incident through the summer of 1959 and the Montana Board of Education accepted the 308-women dormitory, to be named “Hapner Hall” for longtime head of the Education Department, Leona Hapner, at their October 12, 1959 meeting. (Minutes, 10/12/1959). The 94,612 square foot building was completed at a cost of $1,405,000. (Master Building List). Today, Hapner Hall continues to serve its original purpose as a women’s dormitory. Cushing & Terrell The Billings firm of Cushing & Terrell, also known as Cushing, Terrell and Associates, is now called CTA. Cushing & Terrell was founded in 1938, when partners Ralph Cushing and Everett Terrell joined forces. Ralph Henry Cushing was born in Dillon, Montana on January 16, 1903. He was educated at Montana State College, from which he received a Bachelor of Science degree in Architecture in 1927. He went on to earn a Bachelor of Science degree in Architectural Engineering from the University of Michigan in 1932. He worked for others, apprenticing in architecture and engineering, before establishing the firm of Cushing, Terrell and Associates in 1938. Cushing’s partner Edwin O. Terrell was born in Billings, Montana on February 11, 1908. He was educated at the University of Washington, where he earned a Bachelor’s Degree in Architecture in 1931. His first listed architectural employment was with Cushing, Terrell and Associates. MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 6 History of Property Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 Cushing, Terrell and Associates had an established reputation in Montana at mid-century, based on extensive work in the areas of education (schools and university buildings) and healthcare (hospitals and related structures). They also designed numerous buildings for state and local governments. Additional building types undertaken by the firm included commercial structures and resort developments. When faced with a downturn in the education market in 1966, the firm re- organized and expanded. Today, CTA is a multi-disciplinary firm with sixteen offices throughout Montana and six other western states. Their office, constructed in 1958, was located across N. 27th Street from the Eastern Montana College (now Montana State University—Billings) campus, just south of the Physical Education Building. Notable buildings designed by the firm include several buildings on the Montana State University—Billings campus; buildings for the Midland Empire Fairgrounds in Billings; Highland Elementary School and Shrine Auditorium in Billings; the hospital in Red Lodge; the Dude Rancher Lodge in Billings; the Veteran’s Hospital in Miles City; Deaconess Hospital in Billings; and the Montana Crippled Children’s Association Rehabilitation Center in Missoula; among many others. (Painter, 49). In addition the Hapner Hall, Cushing, Terrill and Associates designed a number of other buildings on the Montana State University campus, including Hannon Hall (1955), Reid Hall (1959), Leon Johnson Hall (1973), Wilson Hall (1974) and the Visual Communications Building (1983). More recently, CTA has undertaken the renovation of campus buildings including the Brick Breden Field House Renovation (1998) and Renne Library (2003). MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 7 Information Sources/Bibliography Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 INFORMATION SOURCES/BIBLIOGRAPHY Building Master List. Physical Plant Records, Montana State University. Burlingame, Merrill. A History: Montana State University. Bozeman, Montana. Bozeman, MT: Office of Information Publication, February 1968. Cushing, Terrill and Associates, “Specifications for Women’s Residence Hall No. 2, Montana State College,” 1958. University Records, 58-0001. Montana State Board of Education. “Minutes, March 17, 1958.” University Records, 58-001. Montana State Board of Education. “Minutes, October 12, 1959.” University Records, 58-001. Montana State College. “Building Construction, 1957-1960.” University Records, 0030, N2 / 522, “Building Program.” Montana State University. “Fall Head Count Enrollment History, 1893 to Present,” Website accessed online at http://www.montana.edu/opa/facts/headhist.html . Nunn, Jessie, “Hannon Hall, Montana State University, Montana Property Record Form,” December 31, 2012. Montana State Historic Preservation Office. Painter, Diane J. “Langford Hall, Montana Property Record Form,” July 18, 2010. Montana State Preservation Office. Painter, Diane J. Montana Post-World War II Architectural Survey and Inventory: Historic Context and Survey Report , December 2010. MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 8 Statement of Significance Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES NRHP Listing Date: NA NRHP Eligibility: Yes No Individually Contributing to Historic District Noncontributing to Historic District NRHP Criteria: A B C D Area of Significance: Education, Architecture Period of Significance: 1959-1968 STATEMENT OF SIGNIFICANCE Hapner Hall is a contributing building to the Montana State University Historic District, which is eligible for listing under Criteria A and C. Along with Langford Hall, a men’s dormitory completed in 1960, it represents a continuing effort to provide improved residential accommodations that would attract potential students after the temporary housing of the World War II and immediate post-War period. Hapner and Langford Hall also represent the continued success of President Ronald R. Renne’s “open end” financing policy that began with the construction of Hannon Hall and Lewis & Clark Hall in 1955. The policy had all dormitories and student fee buildings (such as the Student Union) sharing their revenue to pay off construction bonds. Together with Hannon Hall (1955), Lewis & Clark Hall (1955) and Langford Hall (1960), Hapner Hall is also an integral component of a residential cluster of buildings that significantly expanded the Montana State campus to the north during a period of steady growth from 1952 to 1960. Architectually, Hapner Hall is an important example of Mid-Century Modern architecture as applied to a dormitory at Montana State University, despite recent alterations to its main entrance. Most significantly, a pattern of recessed windows and spandrels provide decoration on its otherwise unadorned elevations, a desgn element commonly employed in Mid-Century Mondern buildings. Aluminum windows and slender curtain wall entrances are also hallmarks of the style. Finally, Hapner Hall is significant as one of many campus building designed by the Billings archtectural firm, Cushing & Terrell (now CTA), between 1955 and 1985. MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 9 Integrity Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 INTEGRITY (location, design, setting, materials, workmanship, feeling, association) Hapner Hall retains sufficient integrity to contribute to the Montana State University Historic District. While somewhat oversized and lacking the symmetry of the original design, the 2012 renovation of the main entrance is sympathetic to the Mid-Century Modern aesthetic and is clearly differentiated from original portions of the building though the use of contemporary materials. Outside of the renovated entrance, Hapner Hall largely retains its original design, workmanship and materials, and most renovations, including the 2012 replacement of its original windows with 2500 Series DeSCo Architectural aluminum units, are historically sensitive. Furthermore, it maintains its original location and setting within a cluster of 1950s and early 1960s residential halls including Hannon Hall (1955), Lewis & Clark Hall (1955) and Langford Hall (1960). Despite the 2012 alteration, it still conveys its architectural significance as one of many examples of Mid- Century Modern architecture on campus, and its associational significance as a dormitory constructed during a significant growth period at Montana State between 1952 and 1960. MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 10 Photographs Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 Hapner Hall South Façade, New Main Entrance, Facing: NE Montana State University Jessie Nunn, October 7,2012 MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 11 Photographs Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 Hapner Hall South Entrance and East Façade of West Wing, Facing: W Montana State University Jessie Nunn, October 7, 2012 MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 12 Photographs Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 Hapner Hall South Elevation of East Connecting Corridor, Facing: N Montana State University Jessie Nunn, October 7, 2012 MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 13 Photographs Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 Hapner Hall South and West Elevations of West Wing, Facing: N Montana State University Jessie Nunn, October 7, 2012 MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 14 Photographs Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 Hapner Hall Rear (North) Elevation of Central Section and West Elevation of East Wing, Facing: SE Montana State University Jessie Nunn, October 7, 2012 MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 15 Photographs Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 Hapner Hall North Elevation of East Connecting Corridor and East Elevation of Central Section, Facing: SW Montana State University Jessie Nunn, October 7, 2012 MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 16 Photographs Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 Hapner Hall East Elevation of East Wing, Facing: SW Montana State University Jessie Nunn, October 7, 2012 MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 17 Photographs Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 Buildings Elevations for “Women’s Residence Hall #2”, Cushing, Terrell & Associates, Sheets 7 & 8. University Records. MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 18 Site Map Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336 MONTANA HISTORIC PROPERTY RECORD PAGE 19 Topographic Map Property Name: Hapner Hall Site Number: 24GA0336