Wander into Park Woods just east of the 91短视频 campus and you鈥檒l come across a rustic cabin in a clearing. If you want to know how that cabin landed there and what university revels took place in the past, read on鈥
But more likely, you know and remember鈥
Built as a gift by the classes of 1946 and 1950, Park Woods Cabin was the central hub of socialization and recreation on 91短视频鈥檚 campus for more than 40 years. But over time, as recreation options diversified and Harrisonburg itself expanded, the cabin fell into disrepair, and eventually disuse.
In 2013, students hoping to preserve the cabin and use it again for recreational activities headed up a revitalization effort, including hiring a contractor to pull up asbestos floor tiles, installing a wood stove and fixing the leaky roof. In early fall 2015, the cabin was once more full with students fulfilling the cabin鈥檚 original intention: fellowship and socialization around good Mennonite food.
1950: Socials and meetings
In the late 1940s, before the cabin was built, 鈥渢here wasn鈥檛 much doing in Harrisonburg for students,鈥 said Laban Peachey 鈥52 who later served as dean of students. 鈥淭he cabin was a very important place for social events.鈥
Around campus (EMC wasn鈥檛 actually in Harrisonburg in the 鈥40s) there was little but cornfields and dirt roads. Most students didn鈥檛 have cars and even if they did, there wasn鈥檛 anywhere to go.
D. Lowell Nissley was senior class president in 1950. He and Jacob A. Shenk drew up the plans for the cabin, which included a native limestone fireplace built by a Harrisonburg local. 鈥淲e [both the college and high school graduating classes] wanted to do something significant for the school,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he whole class worked on it on Saturdays when we had a chance.鈥 The class named the finished structure Oakwood. Several years later, the college asked if they could use the name for a new men鈥檚 dorm and the cabin became simply 鈥渢he cabin鈥 and then Park Woods Cabin.
Laban Peachey was a freshman in 1949 and one of the first classes to actually use the cabin.
鈥淚n those days there were only about 250 students at EMC,鈥 he said. 鈥淕roups of 10, 20, 30 people would use the cabin for class meetings and college socials. We would have marshmallows and hot dogs too 鈥 not very often, but sometimes.鈥
1960s: ‘The Bard’s Nest’
In 1966, the cabin began to be used as EMC鈥檚 first coffeehouse. The students, perhaps as a reflection of the folksy vibes of the 鈥60s, named it 鈥淭he Bard鈥檚 Nest.鈥 Twenty years later, when (now) 91短视频 English professor was a student, the cabin was still used for that purpose.
鈥淲e would have open mic sessions, read music and host musical performances,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t was kind of like what Common Grounds is today, but cooler.鈥
Gusler likened the Bard鈥檚 Nest to a 鈥渄ive bar鈥 with regulars to whom they served birch beer or homemade hot chocolate. In the early 鈥90s, the Nest added an espresso maker. Tables were lit with candles stuck in empty bottles and old burlap sacks served as backdrop to student artwork on the walls.
But by the time Gusler was on the scene, the building already had problems. There was no sewage or drainage tank on site and so no bathrooms. When it rained, the building sometimes flooded. The fireplace took more heat than it put out.
2000: the shift to University Commons
By August of 2000, the first phase of the University Commons was finished and Park Woods Cabin temporarily closed.
鈥淯niversity Commons shifted the focus of the university,鈥 said , director of the physical plant. 鈥淭he Snack Shop was built with a stage in the corner intended to replace the Bard鈥檚 Nest, but it was never really used.鈥
In part that鈥檚 because shortly after, in December of 2001, 91短视频 received a grant from the Lilly Foundation to build what is now the coffeehouse known as . 鈥淲hen Common Grounds came around, that met the need the Bard鈥檚 Nest had been meeting,鈥 said Kurtz.
It also made the facilities issues down at Park Woods Cabin a little more glaring. But other projects, namely building new residence halls, took priority over the cabin and it was left empty for over a decade.
2013: New life
In February of 2013, 91短视频 News published a plea: 鈥淲e need your help in deciding the next step for Park Woods Cabin. There is student interest in improving the condition of the cabin, which is currently not in use.鈥
A carpenter鈥檚 guild, made up primarily of 91短视频 alumni, stepped in and helped refurbish the cabin free of charge. The physical plant provided most of the materials; the students fundraised for the rest.
The cabin now boasts new flooring, a weatherproof roof, a woodstove instead of the fireplace and a clean chimney. A plaque in the wood paneling above the stove commemorates the cabin as a gift of the classes of 1946 and 1950. There is no longer running water (it was too difficult to maintain) and no plans to install pipes or a sewer system.
But on any given weekend, light can be seen spilling from the windows, once more giving the old building a feeling of new life. The most recent use: the hosted a jam session over Homecoming weekend.
Editor’s Note: Some alumni have reported that the original “Bard’s Nest” was located in a building called the Guild, and that the coffeehouse didn’t move down into Park Woods Cabin until the mid-1970’s. Please feel free to comment on this. We’re eager to learn more. –10/15/2015

Park Cabin was such a great place to hang out for us in the 60s and 70s. But The Bard’s Nest was in a little wood addition to the Guild when I was in college, 1969-73. I spent many evenings there drinking Russian tea and playing guitar.