Workmen on the roof of Loyola Hall during a renovation project. St. Thomas Hall and Galvin Terrace (later the site of the Weinberg Memorial Library) are in the background and Monroe Avenue can be seen below.
1976 plaque dedicating a Communications room in Loyola Hall to Rev. Joseph Murgas, a Wilkes-Barre priest who made significant contributions to the development of wireless communication technology.
Parents' Day at the University in 1959 showing a group at the back of Loyola Hall (a small portion of the Estate can be seen at left), and in one of the laboratories.
The E (Engineering) Building (later the site of St. Thomas Hall) on Linden Street (later the University Commons). Loyola Hall and Monroe Avenue are visible in the background, and the foreground area would later be Galvin Terrace and then the Weinberg Memorial Library.
Barracks (E Building and B Building) at the intersection of Linden Street and Monroe Avenue. This would later be the site of St. Thomas Hall. The Catlin House (Lackawanna Historical Society) is in the foreground.
Construction of an island on Linden Street in front of St. Thomas Hall. The Gallery Building and Scranton Hall appear in the background. The parking lot to the right would later be Galvin Terrace and then the Weinberg Memorial Library.
Two students walking up Linden Street (later the University Commons) circa 1960. The Esso gas station in the background was demolished later in the decade.
Crawford House (or the Lackawanna County Juvenile Center), the current site of the McDade Literary and Performing Arts Center. The parking lot would later be turned into Galvin Terrace, and then the Weinberg Memorial Library
Monroe Avenue, 1971. St. Thomas Hall, Galvin Terrace, and Crawford House (the Lackawanna Juvenile Detention Center) are visible in the background. Taken from the steps of Loyola Hall.
Linden Street (prior to the construction of the University Commons) after a snowfall. Gunster Memorial Student Center is on left, and St. Thomas Hall is on right.
Corner of Linden Street and Monroe Avenue with remnants of a Scranton family home. The Arts Building would be constructed here in 1947, followed by Galvin Terrace in the 1960s, and finally by the Weinberg Memorial Library in 1992.
Construction contract signing for a new University classroom building (Hyland Hall). From left, (seated): Rev. J. A. Panuska, S.J. (University President) and Ralph Mancuso (executive vice president, S.G. Mastriani Construction Corp.); (standing) architects David Leung and Alex Camayd of Leung, Hemmler & Camayd, P.C., and James Devers (University staff architect and project officer).