Think you’ve got it rough in your dorm? Check out these pictures of dorm rooms from 1947.
Don’t like your new roommate? What if you had two dozen new roommates? Here’s a room of twenty-four-or-so prison-grade beds.
More after the jump.
Mid-century Tar Heels were pioneers of shabby chic. Who needs expensive carpeting when newspaper and cigarette butts do just as well?
The real hazard of dorm life in the mid-1940s was sudden and spontaneous self-explosion. Witness below the aftermath of such an incident.
Talk about a royal flush! Maybe, some students were tired of getting cheated every time they got up to use the toilet.
After the War, UNC had an influx of students on the G.I. Bill, more than could be accommodated, so Quonset huts (one of the many industrial byproducts of the war) were set up on tennis courts to serve as dorms. One returning soldier was heard to say that he’d lived in better conditions in the army than in these tin dorms. (You can see an exterior shot of the huts here.)
We at University Archives hope your living arrangements are more comfortable, if not necessarily more neat, than those of your forebears.
Welcome and welcome back! We hope you have a great semester.
Were these huts the “tin cans” I remember my father mentioning? He returned to UNC after the serving in the Korean War. He and my mother loved Chapel Hill so much! Now their granddaughters are there loving it just as much!
Glad to see lofted beds are not a new phenomenon!
@Bonna Leonard: These huts definitely fit the bill, but the old basketball stadium at UNC was also called “The Tin Can,” so your father could have been referring to that as well.