UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — An architectural landmark along Penn State's famous Mall on the University Park campus, Burrowes Building was closed for renovations in 2014. Two years later, the building has reopened and is back in the business of serving students in the College of the Liberal Arts. The University rededicated Burrowes in April.
Built to be the headquarters of the then-School of Education, notable American architect Charles Z. Klauder designed the original central structure, which was completed in 1940. Two wings were added in 1967 in response to a substantial increase in University enrollment.
Originally dubbed the Education Building, it was later re-named for Thomas Henry Burrowes, who was president of Penn State (when it was the Agricultural College of Pennsylvania) from 1868 to 1870. A passionate advocate for public education, Thomas Burrowes developed the system of free public education in Pennsylvania and drafted the law establishing the Pennsylvania State Normal System. He also was State Superintendent of Common Schools in 1835-38 and 1860-63, and founded the Pennsylvania School Journal.
Inscribed on the building's exterior are 28 names of people who made important historic contributions to the development of education in theory, method or practice. Among them are Burrowes himself, as well as other former Penn State Presidents Edwin Erle Sparks and George W. Atherton.