Arthur M. Blank School
The Blank School engages Babson community members and leads research to create entrepreneurial leaders.
On March 23, 2018, the Babson Globe was moved from its current space outside Coleman Hall and much-needed restoration will begin, including an investigation by a team of engineers into how to make the Globe rotate once again.
During its refurbishments, the Globe will sit safely within scaffolding on campus in the Trim parking lot. Visitors will be able to read about its history, updates, and the engineering involved in the Globe’s yearlong, donor-funded restoration. The Globe will be rededicated in May 2019 in its new location in Kerry Murphy Healey Park, where it will spin and inspire Babson students for generations. As the centerpiece of the park, the Globe is a prominent symbol of the College’s commitment to our global community, and our respect for Roger Babson’s founding dream that we “appreciate the world as a whole.”
Roger Babson decides to build the Globe as part of the Map and Globe Museum
Construction begins, funded out of pocket by Roger Babson
Roger Babson dedicates the Globe to the United Nations
Globe construction is completed
Tens of thousands of annual visitors to the Globe
Globe falls into disrepair
Tim Domini ’78, MBA’82 becomes curator of Map and Globe Museum
Globe’s tiles removed and placed in storage
Ongoing deterioration; machinery that made the Globe spin stops working
Decision made to demolish the Globe
C. Christopher Lingamfelter ’91 and Professor Larry Meile form the Save the Globe committee
ADE inductee Michael Smurfit donates $75,000 to restore the Globe; President Glavin creates a Future of the Globe Committee
William Yeager ’49 and family donate $55,000 to finish the Globe restoration
Restoration of the Globe
Rededication of the refurbished Globe
Relief map is removed from Coleman Hall to make way for student housing, but the Globe remains outside
Restoration begins on the Globe
Refurbished Globe moves to its new home in Kerry Murphy Healey Park
The Babson Globe is the brainchild of Roger Babson, the College’s brilliant and eccentric founder. Together with a 65-foot plaster relief map of the lower 48 states, it was the centerpiece of The Map and Globe Museum in Coleman Hall. The Globe was meant to “impress upon students and other viewers an appreciation of the world as a whole … stimulating an interest in world geography, history, economics, transportation, and trade.” Babson and his grandson, Roger Webber, came up with the idea for the Globe in 1947, provided $200,000 in personal funding, and commissioned the Globe’s construction in the early 1950s.
When it was dedicated in 1955, the Globe measured 28 feet in diameter and weighed 25 tons. It was engineered to rotate on its own axis (though notably, it did not rotate on an oak tree trunk as Roger Babson originally envisioned). The Globe was the largest of its kind at the time, and drew tens of thousands of visitors to campus each year. Unfortunately, as the Globe aged and fell into disrepair, the crowds stopped coming and by the late 1970s the Globe was in poor condition.
Shortly after graduation, alumni Tim Domini ’78, MBA’82 became the Map and Globe Museum’s curator. He served as a key contributor to the relief map restoration efforts during the 1980s, educating the community on the need for restoration. Student volunteers, under the guidance of cartographer Jaime Quintero, scrubbed, recast, repositioned, and repainted the relief map’s 1,216 plaster tiles in 1980–1981.
Meanwhile, some of the 574 enamel tiles that formed the Globe’s exterior began falling off. The administration decided to remove the remaining tiles, and sent everything to storage. Left exposed to the elements, the machinery and electrical system that had once allowed the Globe to spin rusted and broke down. By 1988, the administration decided to demolish the Globe entirely.
In response, students and faculty led by C. Christopher Lingamfelter ’91 and Professor Larry Meile formed the Save the Globe committee. Although their fundraising efforts progressed slowly, they were able to postpone the Globe’s demolition. Inspired by their cause, the 1989 Academy of Distinguished Entrepreneurs® inductee Michael Smurfit donated $75,000, making the restoration feasible.
Incoming president William Glavin tackled the Globe restoration as one of his administration’s first projects, announcing a Future of the Globe Committee tasked with finishing the Globe’s restoration. The committee secured a $55,000 gift from William Yeager ’49 and his family to complete the restoration. When the Globe was rededicated in 1993, it featured 506 vinyl panels and the most advanced satellite imagery available at the time.
Babson College’s ultimate goal is a campus where everyone feels a sense of belonging and where the things that make us different from one another become our strongest assets. … The college is committed to creating an environment on campus conducive to diversity and internationalism.”