Fisher Hall (Miami University)

With the construction of Miami's Center for Performing Arts in 1968, the theatre became unused and the building turned into a storage facility.

Fisher Hall was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978, but delisted that same year.

The three-story building formed the letter T and the head of the T, which is the east–west section, was designed to have a major porch with an entry at each end.

It was founded and constructed under the leadership of Reverend Dr. John Witherspoon Scott, a pioneer educator and father-in-law of President Benjamin Harrison.

[2] Ebenezer Lane, a Cincinnati judge, donated 44 acres of land on the northeast edge of Oxford as well as a substantial amount of money.

The building was designed by James K. Wilson, who was a charter member of the Cincinnati Chapter of the American Institute of Architects.

The first was that Ronald Tammen met foul play, the second, that he was a victim of amnesia and finally, that he deliberately planned to leave the campus and start a new life under an assumed name.

[8] An April 1960 article from the Dayton Daily News mentioned that Tammen's roommate Chuck Findlay still believed he was alive and the two of them were "very, very close".

"[9] The Marcum Center, a hotel and conference facility opened in September 1982 on the former site of Fisher Hall.

Fisher Hall as Oxford Female College c1860