Stefan T. Vail Cooperative House
42°17′01.91″N 83°44′30.90″W / 42.2838639°N 83.7419167°W In Ann Arbor, Michigan, Stefan T. Vail Cooperative House (or Vail House) is a housing cooperative for college students at the University of Michigan, Washtenaw Community College, and Eastern Michigan University. A member of the Inter-Cooperative Council (ICC) in Ann Arbor, Vail house is named after Stefan Valavanis, a former ICC President who became a notable economist. It is one of only two known adobe buildings in Ann Arbor.[1]
History[edit]
The building proper was constructed in 1853 and has been recognized by the Ann Arbor Historical Commission; one of the pillars on the front porch bears a plaque which identifies it as the Hubbell Gregory House. Gregory was the original owner of the house and his descendants lived there until 1914, when his daughter Jennie Gregory died.[1] Afterwards it became the residence of the family of Horace Greely Prettyman, who owned the Ann Arbor Press and White Swan Laundry.[1] They added the porte cochere at this time.[1] The Prettyman family lived here until around 1945, after which Abbie Schaefer took it over and ran it as a rooming house called Abby House.[1]
In 1960 it was purchased by the Inter-Cooperative Council and opened as women's cooperative housing in the fall of 1961. In 1991, it became the only all-female co-op in the ICC system, though today it is open to any gender.[1]
In addition to being one of the oldest houses in Ann Arbor, Vail House also boasts a magnificent oak tree in its front yard which has been estimated to be over two hundred years old.
Stefan T. Valavanis[edit]
Vail House was named for Stefan T. Vail (or Stephanos Valavanis),[1] who was an ICC member and president in the mid-1950s. While at the University of Michigan, Stefan Vail helped to devise the financial structure of the ICC.[2] After having earned his doctorate in economics, Stefan Vail was an assistant professor of economics at Harvard University from 1956 to 1958.[3] While camping near Mount Olympus in Greece, Stefan Vail was shot and killed by an army deserter who mistook him for a pursuing officer.[4] His death was called a "tragedy" by his senior colleague at the Harvard Economics Department, Seymour Harris, who wrote that Valavanis was "brilliant, imaginative, and a first–class scholar and teacher"; according to Seymour, Valavanis's econometrics textbook had "pedagogical strength", proceeding "more by statements of problems and examples than by the development of mathematical proofs".[5] Soon after, the ICC Board of Directors voted to name the next house they purchased after Vail, in recognizing his contributions to the ICC and to economics.[6] In 1979, European members of the Econometric Society contributed papers to a volume commemorating Valavanis.[7]
References[edit]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Wineberg, Marjorie Reade and Susan (1992). HISTORIC BUILDINGS ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN. Ann Arbor Historic District Commission. ISBN 9781882574001.
- ^ Stephan T. Vail Cooperative House History Archived 2007-03-20 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Valavanis, Stefan (1959). Alfred H. Conrad (from Vail's manuscript) (ed.). Econometrics: An introduction to maximum likelihood methods. Economics handbook series. New York: McGraw–Hill Book Company, Inc.
- ^ "Hyder Rollins Dies; Economist Murdered | News | the Harvard Crimson".
- ^ Valavanis, Stefan (1959). "Editor's preface". In Harris, Seymour (ed.). Econometrics: An introduction to maximum likelihood methods. Economics handbook series (edited by Alfred H. Conrad (from Vail's manuscript) and posthumously published ed.). New York: McGraw–Hill Book Company, Inc. pp. vii–viii.
- ^ Stephan T. Vail Cooperative House History Archived 2010-11-24 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ E. G. Chratis, ed. (1981). Proceedings of the Econometric Society European meeting 1979 (Athens, September 3–6): Selected econometric papers in memory of Stefan Valavanis. Contributions to economic analysis. Vol. 138. pp. xvi+444. ISBN 0-444-86184-X.
External links[edit]
- Vail house website
- Paul J. Huntington Symphony Orchestra: Paul, the Album (music reflecting contemporary culture at Vail House)