Chapel
Hill is home to University of North Carolina, forming the “Research Triangle”
along with Durham (Duke University) and Raleigh (North Carolina State). Although
we’ve been in/around Chapel Hill a few times while living in Greenville, I had
never seen the campus. We explored the North Carolina Botanical Gardens one
morning a couple weeks ago (operated by the University of North Carolina), and
when Roberts was liberated from his work obligations we picked him up and
headed to downtown Chapel Hill, a town founded specifically to serve the
University.
Coincidentally we picked up a NC jersey at a consignment sale last month |
Kenan
Memorial Stadium is home to the North Carolina Tar Heels. There has been an
unwritten rule since the Stadium opened in 1927; the stadium can never be
taller than the surrounding pine trees. With a current capacity of 63,000, the
largest number to ever fill the stadium for a game was (before the 2011
expansion) a standing-room-only crowd of 62,000, when the Tar Heels hosted the
Florida State Seminoles in 1997.
Specifically chose this picture because you can't see Mikus isn't wearing pants |
Adjacent
to the stadium is the 172 foot tall bell tower. Dedicated to John Motley
Morehead (class of 1891) and Rufus Lenoir Patterson II who funded the bell
tower’s construction, the tower was dedicated on Thanksgiving Day, 1931. Up in
the belfry are fourteen mechanized bells, which replaced the carillon of twelve
manually operated ones some time ago. Traditionally a few days before
commencement, seniors get the chance to climb the tower, but on our visit the
door was securely locked and we could only imagine the view of campus afforded
from the top. Dr. William C. Coker, the first Professor of Botany at the
University, designed the hedge and lawn surrounding the tower, with peeks of
the stadium down the southeast hedge row.
Continuing
north we came to Professor Coker’s legacy, the 5.3 acre Coker Arboretum. The
boggy pasture was originally developed as an outdoor classroom for the study of
trees, shrubs and vines native to the State, until the 1920’s and following
decades when Dr. Coker added many East Asian trees and shrubs. Today
the collection ranges from flowering trees and shrubs to bulb and perennial
displays, featuring a 300 foot native vine arbor and a Metasequoia (dawn redwood).
After
an ice cream stop for the boys we finished our UNC tour at Top of the Hill
Restaurant and Brewery. The pub opened in 1994 and was one of the first
microbreweries in the state, and these days is possibly one of the best places
to be after a UNC win due to the view of Franklin Street. The infamous “bonfire”
celebrations occur when students and fans spill into the street from the bars,
restaurants and dorms along Franklin, resulting in occurrences such as after a
1982 game when the street was literally painted blue. In 2009 after winning the
men's NCAA championship over 45,000 people crowded Franklin Street.
Top: view from Top of the Hill, bottom: a Franklin Street bonfire (source here) |
All
three Research Triangle teams are in the tournament this year, and all have
fared well so far. Tomorrow UNC (seeded 4th) will face off against Wisconsin, while Duke (1st seed) plays
Utah and NC State (8th seed) upset Villanova for a game against Louisville on Friday.
Maybe we’ll see them meet up in the semifinals or finals!
Top of the Hill mascot wearing #23 |
* A
small part of me is cheering on University of North Carolina, just because that’s
where my childhood home-town hero played three seasons of basketball. A couple
years after his Tar Heels won the national championship in 1982, Michael Jordan
joined the Chicago Bulls.
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