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Description
Date

Photograph of the entrance to the driveway to Walton House at Tennessee Tech University.

2021-10-12

Photograph of brick columns marking the entryway to the Walton House driveway at Tennessee Tech University. A black and gold plaque reads "The Walton House."

2021-10-12

Photographs of the driveway to the Walton House taken by freshman student Bryson Lee.

2021-10-12

Photograph of Tennessee Tech University President Everett Derryberry and First Lady Joan Derryberry seated in a living room of Walton House of Tennessee Tech. Joan is seated on a sofa and petting the family's cat, which is laying on the sofa armrest. Everett is seated on a sidechair beside the sofa and looking at the cat.

circa 1960s-1970s

 Tennessee Tech's magazine.

2004

Tennessee Tech built the first president’s home in 1927 under the tenure of President Quintin Miller Smith (1920-1938). Tech expanded and remodeled the home in 1942 under Everett Derryberry. Later, the home was located on ground that was needed for a women’s dormitory expansion so Tech tore it down. Tech built the second president’s home, Walton House, during Derryberry’s presidency. Walton House is named after Old Walton Road, which was the historical route from Nashville to Washington DC that passed the campus. The current home is designed in the Georgian style shared with the rest of the campus. Contractors did not build Walton House, but rather it was built by Tech Maintenance under the Director of Buildings and Grounds, Frank Moss and Beecher Eller. Completed in 1965, it took over four years to complete construction because campus maintenance took precedence.

1976

Tennessee Tech built the first president’s home in 1927 under the tenure of President Quintin Miller Smith (1920-1938). Tech expanded and remodeled the home in 1942 under Everett Derryberry. Later, the home was located on ground that was needed for a women’s dormitory expansion so Tech tore it down. Tech built the second president’s home, Walton House, during Derryberry’s presidency. Walton House is named after Old Walton Road, which was the historical route from Nashville to Washington DC that passed the campus. The current home is designed in the Georgian style shared with the rest of the campus. Contractors did not build Walton House, but rather it was built by Tech Maintenance under the Director of Buildings and Grounds, Frank Moss and Beecher Eller. Completed in 1965, it took over four years to complete construction because campus maintenance took precedence.

1976

Tennessee Tech built the first president’s home in 1927 under the tenure of President Quintin Miller Smith (1920-1938). Tech expanded and remodeled the home in 1942 under Everett Derryberry. Later, the home was located on ground that was needed for a women’s dormitory expansion so Tech tore it down. Tech built the second president’s home, Walton House, during Derryberry’s presidency. Walton House is named after Old Walton Road, which was the historical route from Nashville to Washington DC that passed the campus. The current home is designed in the Georgian style shared with the rest of the campus. Contractors did not build Walton House, but rather it was built by Tech Maintenance under the Director of Buildings and Grounds, Frank Moss and Beecher Eller. Completed in 1965, it took over four years to complete construction because campus maintenance took precedence.

1976

Tennessee Tech built the first president’s home in 1927 under the tenure of President Quintin Miller Smith (1920-1938). Tech expanded and remodeled the home in 1942 under Everett Derryberry. Later, the home was located on ground that was needed for a women’s dormitory expansion so Tech tore it down. Tech built the second president’s home, Walton House, during Derryberry’s presidency. Walton House is named after Old Walton Road, which was the historical route from Nashville to Washington DC that passed the campus. The current home is designed in the Georgian style shared with the rest of the campus. Contractors did not build Walton House, but rather it was built by Tech Maintenance under the Director of Buildings and Grounds, Frank Moss and Beecher Eller. Completed in 1965, it took over four years to complete construction because campus maintenance took precedence.

1973-10

Tennessee Tech built the first president’s home in 1927 under the tenure of President Quintin Miller Smith (1920-1938). Tech expanded and remodeled the home in 1942 under Everett Derryberry. Later, the home was located on ground that was needed for a women’s dormitory expansion so Tech tore it down. Tech built the second president’s home, Walton House, during Derryberry’s presidency. Walton House is named after Old Walton Road, which was the historical route from Nashville to Washington DC that passed the campus. The current home is designed in the Georgian style shared with the rest of the campus. Contractors did not build Walton House, but rather it was built by Tech Maintenance under the Director of Buildings and Grounds, Frank Moss and Beecher Eller. Completed in 1965, it took over four years to complete construction because campus maintenance took precedence.

1982-05-30

Tennessee Tech built the first president’s home in 1927 under the tenure of President Quintin Miller Smith (1920-1938). Tech expanded and remodeled the home in 1942 under Everett Derryberry. Later, the home was located on ground that was needed for a women’s dormitory expansion so Tech tore it down. Tech built the second president’s home, Walton House, during Derryberry’s presidency. Walton House is named after Old Walton Road, which was the historical route from Nashville to Washington DC that passed the campus. The current home is designed in the Georgian style shared with the rest of the campus. Contractors did not build Walton House, but rather it was built by Tech Maintenance under the Director of Buildings and Grounds, Frank Moss and Beecher Eller. Completed in 1965, it took over four years to complete construction because campus maintenance took precedence.

1982-05-30

Tennessee Tech built the first president’s home in 1927 under the tenure of President Quintin Miller Smith (1920-1938). Tech expanded and remodeled the home in 1942 under Everett Derryberry. Later, the home was located on ground that was needed for a women’s dormitory expansion so Tech tore it down. Tech built the second president’s home, Walton House, during Derryberry’s presidency. Walton House is named after Old Walton Road, which was the historical route from Nashville to Washington DC that passed the campus. The current home is designed in the Georgian style shared with the rest of the campus. Contractors did not build Walton House, but rather it was built by Tech Maintenance under the Director of Buildings and Grounds, Frank Moss and Beecher Eller. Completed in 1965, it took over four years to complete construction because campus maintenance took precedence.

1982-05-30

Tennessee Tech built the first president’s home in 1927 under the tenure of President Quintin Miller Smith (1920-1938). Tech expanded and remodeled the home in 1942 under Everett Derryberry. Later, the home was located on ground that was needed for a women’s dormitory expansion so Tech tore it down. Tech built the second president’s home, Walton House, during Derryberry’s presidency. Walton House is named after Old Walton Road, which was the historical route from Nashville to Washington DC that passed the campus. The current home is designed in the Georgian style shared with the rest of the campus. Contractors did not build Walton House, but rather it was built by Tech Maintenance under the Director of Buildings and Grounds, Frank Moss and Beecher Eller. Completed in 1965, it took over four years to complete construction because campus maintenance took precedence.

1982-05-30

Tennessee Tech built the first president’s home in 1927 under the tenure of President Quintin Miller Smith (1920-1938). Tech expanded and remodeled the home in 1942 under Everett Derryberry. Later, the home was located on ground that was needed for a women’s dormitory expansion so Tech tore it down. Tech built the second president’s home, Walton House, during Derryberry’s presidency. Walton House is named after Old Walton Road, which was the historical route from Nashville to Washington DC that passed the campus. The current home is designed in the Georgian style shared with the rest of the campus. Contractors did not build Walton House, but rather it was built by Tech Maintenance under the Director of Buildings and Grounds, Frank Moss and Beecher Eller. Completed in 1965, it took over four years to complete construction because campus maintenance took precedence.

1982-05-30

Tennessee Tech built the first president’s home in 1927 under the tenure of President Quintin Miller Smith (1920-1938). Tech expanded and remodeled the home in 1942 under Everett Derryberry. Later, the home was located on ground that was needed for a women’s dormitory expansion so Tech tore it down. Tech built the second president’s home, Walton House, during Derryberry’s presidency. Walton House is named after Old Walton Road, which was the historical route from Nashville to Washington DC that passed the campus. The current home is designed in the Georgian style shared with the rest of the campus. Contractors did not build Walton House, but rather it was built by Tech Maintenance under the Director of Buildings and Grounds, Frank Moss and Beecher Eller. Completed in 1965, it took over four years to complete construction because campus maintenance took precedence.

1976

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