UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. – When the audience is watching a live performance of Oscar Wilde’s comedy “The Importance of Being Earnest” at the Pavilion Theatre during the week of April 12-23, they might not realize the stage was once home to another kind of “theatre” -- livestock judging, with sheep, cows and horses in the place of actors.
Construction of the Stock Judging Pavilion began in 1913. Designed by renowned American architects Frank Miles Day and Charles Z. Klauder, it was built as part of a plan to improve the facilities of the Department of Animal Husbandry in the then-School of Agriculture (now the College of Agricultural Sciences).
The Pavilion, then as now, was located near the corner of Curtin and Shortlidge Roads. Oval in shape, the interior amphitheatre measured about 120 feet long and 30 feet wide, surrounded on all sides by tiers of concrete seating for 800 spectators. The space also could be divided by curtains, on pulleys, into three classrooms.
The structure held agricultural expositions, judging events, sales and shows, including the annual Little International Dairy Exposition, modeled after Chicago’s International Livestock Exposition. Practical classes in animal husbandry were held in laboratories underneath the concrete tiers, educational work related to the processing and handling of meat and its by-products. The arena also later served as a practice gym for campus athletes.