Clemson UniversityPrevious feature
1   BOWMAN FIELD
2   WILBUR O. AND ANN POWERS COLLEGE OF BUSINESS
3   GANTT CIRCLE
4   NORTH GREEN
5   WATT LAWN
6   EDWARDS HALL
7   LIFE SCIENCES FACILITY
8   LEE HALL
9   ENGINEERING ROW
10   WEST CAMPUS & RESIDENTIAL LIFE
11   CLEMSON MEMORIAL STADIUM & SCROLL OF HONOR
12   SNOW OUTDOOR FITNESS AND WELLNESS COMPLEX

Gantt Circle

The Gantt Circle, named for Harvey and Lucinda Gantt, is the loop in front of Tillman Hall. Welcoming visitors to campus and bordering Bowman Field, it is often filled with students bustling to and from class.

Media Gallery

A Clemson faculty member plays the Carillon Bells.
A student stands at the top of the clock tower.
The Clemson University Carillon is a fixture of Clemson University’s campus. The tolling of the carillon bells marks the change of season and the beginning of a new school year.
The College of Education Media Center
A Call Me MISTER teacher laughs with a group of students.
A view of Gantt Circle with a historical marker.
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Carillon Bells

College of Education

Harvey and Lucinda Gantt

🔔 Carillon Bells

Clemson students have the opportunity to learn to play the 47-bell Clemson Memorial Carillon. Cast in France, the bells range from 32 to 4,300 pounds and can be heard up to a quarter mile from campus.

🏫 College of Education

The College of Education is a transformative leader in improving education – from birth through adulthood. With a particular focus on serving underperforming schools and underserved communities, the College is home to nationally recognized programs including Call Me MISTER, which prepares minority male students for careers in elementary education; ClemsonLIFE, which provides life skills and a college experience for students with intellectual disabilities; and Reading and Recovery, which offers specialized training to teachers of young struggling readers.

⭐ Harvey and Lucinda Gantt

Gantt Circle is named in honor of Harvey and Lucinda Gantt. Harvey Gantt was the first African American student to enroll at Clemson, entering the University in January 1963. Lucinda entered in the fall semester of that same year, making her Clemson’s second African American student to enroll. Because Clemson's desegregation occurred without the violence and protests that had marred integration at many Southern institutions, one national publication dubbed it "Integration with dignity."

Harvey is a partner in the architectural and city planning firm Gantt/Huberman Architects and served two terms as mayor of Charlotte, N.C. He earned a Bachelor of Architecture degree from Clemson University, with honors, in 1965, and in 1970, he received a Master of City Planning degree from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has been a visiting lecturer at a number of prestigious institutions, including his alma mater, Clemson University, where he also received an honorary doctorate.

The Gantts were married in the fall of 1964. Upon Harvey’s graduation in 1965, he and Lucinda moved to Charlotte, N.C. Lucinda was a business manager of East Towne Manor, an assisted-living facility in Charlotte, until her retirement. The Gantts are the proud parents of four children and leave a long-lasting legacy with Clemson University.

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