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A Knight to Remember
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| President's House: honoring its
first residents |
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The President's House has been renamed the
Douglas M. and Grace Knight House to honor the achievements of
Duke's fifth president. Douglas Knight was the first Duke president
to live in the President's House, which was completed in September
1966. The house, located less than a mile from campus at 1508 Pinecrest
Road, has been used as a family home and to entertain official
guests of the university.
The President's House was built under the direction of architect
Alden Dow, who interned under Frank Lloyd Wright. Knight, Duke's
president from 1963 to 1969, and his wife, Grace, chose Dow as
the architect and worked "as a team" to help design the
house, Knight says. "We called it University House. We never
looked at it as simply the President's House. We designed it to
serve a major public function, which was that of being the host
to many university functions, and, at the same time, to have some
qualities of privacy."
Knight, who recently published his memoir, The Dancer and the Dance,
is credited with numerous achievements during his Duke presidency.
He guided curricular revisions in several schools, oversaw a growing
number of contributions in gifts and grants, secured funding for
a School of Business Administration, and presided over major building
projects, including the nation's first hyperbaric oxygenation chamber
and an addition to Perkins Library.
The renaming of the house is a fitting tribute, says former Duke
trustee Mary Duke Biddle Trent Semans '39, the great-granddaughter
of Washington Duke. "There are no people more dedicated to
Duke and to each other as Grace and Doug Knight," Semans says. "This
is a glorious tribute to them. And it is so right."
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