Cats and Dogs Together on Huntington Avenue

This makes the 11th post in my series on Boston’s Bronze Menagerie.

Two of Boston’s 100-odd colleges and universities sit side by side on Huntington Avenue, which is also known as the Avenue of the Arts. Back when one of my brothers attended Wentworth Institute of Technology and I went to Northeastern University, the two campuses did not abut. Both have grown over time, however, and now they bump up against one another.

This proximity contributes to my series on Boston’s Bronze Menagerie because @Northeastern’s mascot is the husky and Wentworth’s is the leopard. That puts me in mind of the famous exchange in the 1984 movie Ghostbusters when Dr. Peter Venkman predicts a disaster of Biblical proportions: “Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together  . . . mass hysteria!”

Despite the movie’s dour scenario, however, Wentworth’s leopard and Northeastern’s King Husky seem to get along pretty well living side by side on Huntington Avenue. 

NU’s King Husky

 King Husky is a large dog that sits on a plinth in Ell Hall just inside the front doors and he looks outward toward the Krentzman Quadrangle. University tradition says that students who pat his nose will have good luck and bring good fortune to the school. All the attention has made the dog’s nose suitably shiny and somewhat worn.

King Husky inside and outside

Northeastern took King Husky as their mascot in 1927, the same year the school adopted red and black as its colors. A series of live dogs held the title but that approach was discontinued, reinstated, and discontinued again.

In 1959 the university raised a fund to create a permanent statue. NU commissioned Boston’s firm of Cassieri and DiBiccari to create the bronze mascot. Anne Philbrick Hall sculpted the statue and it was installed in 1962.

The imposing bronze King Husky sits on a plinth in Ell Hall just inside the front doors, looking outward toward the Krentzman Quadrangle. University tradition says that students who pat his nose will have good luck and bring good fortune to the school. All the attention has made the dog’s nose suitably shiny and somewhat worn. An informal tradition started by NU’s male students, says that King Husky will bark when a virgin walks past but this is false. Just saying.

Another casting of the statue sits outside the entrance to Northeastern’s Parsons Field, where the school’s baseball, soccer and lacrosse teams play.

Wentworth’s Leopard

In the 1930s and 1940s, Wentworth called its athletic teams The Technicians. This  brings to mind a school mascot from The Big Bang Theory and doesn’t make for great rah-rah team spirit. In 1969 @Wentworthinst changed its mascot to a much fiercer beast. They drew the leopard from the coat of arms of the school’s founder Arioch Wentworth. The family shield goes back to 13th century Yorkshire, England, when it was fashioned by William Wentworth. Wentworth’s student newspaper, The Wenitech, described the leopard as a valiant warrior that, “signifies such traits as bravery, swiftness, triumph, and engagement in hazardous enterprises.”

Unlike Northeastern, Wentworth never attempted a live mascot but their bronze statue crouches on a red rock boulder alongside Huntington Avenue. The six-foot-high statue, sculpted by Robert Shure, was unveiled in May of 2003. Mr. Shure also worked at Cascieri and DiBiccari studio when it was extant.

Unlike Northeastern, Wentworth never attempted a live mascot but their bronze leopard crouches on a red rock boulder alongside Huntington Avenue. The institute unveiled the six-foot-high statue, sculpted by Robert Shure, in May of 2003. Mr. Shure also worked at Cascieri and DiBiccari studio when it was in business.

He later combined that firm with the studio of Leo Giust, where he also worked, to create Skylight Studios in Woburn, MA. Mr. Shure has sculpted many statues, both animal and human, found around Boston, including the FAO Schwartz bear

The Stray Cat

Another, much smaller cat, also sculpted by Robert Shure, occupies the NU campus. One half of the statue named “A Man with a Cat Named Yitz,” this kitty sits on a granite bench outside Shillman Hall between Forsyth and Lenox Streets. The statue appeared overnight in February of 2011 with no advance notice.

Another, much smaller cat sculpted by Robert Shure also occupies the NU campus. He is one half of the statue named “A Man with a Cat Named Yitz” that sits on a granite bench outside Shillman Hall between Forsyth and Lenox Streets. The statue appeared overnight in February of 2011 with no advance notice.The bronze human represents Robert J. Shillman (E’68), founder and CEO of Cognex and a benefactor for whom the classroom building is named. He has one hand on Yitz, a stray cat whom he befriended. Northeastern students refer to the little animal as Shillman Cat and he has a lot of friends.

Even though smaller than King Husky, not to mention a leopard, Shillman Cat stands out as the big guy on campus. Shillman Cat frequently poses for photo ops and selfies and is sometimes enlisted to support causes.

He has his own Twitter handle (@shillmancat) and you can search for him on Facebook or check in with him on Foursquare.

Friends of Shillman Cat keep him well dressed with a custom-made wardrobe: a bow tie for Halloween, a Pilgrim hat for Thanksgiving, knitted hat and sweater for winter, mask and beads for Mardi Gras, etc. School tradition says it’s bad luck if Shillman Cat crosses your path. Unlike real-life felines, however, he tends to stay where he was put.

Directions on Huntington Avenue

You can park at meters on Huntington Avenue or on some of the side streets. If you can’t find a space on the street, park in the Prudential Center garage and walk west on Huntington Avenue.

For public transportation, take the MBTA’s Green Line to the Northeastern stop and walk west or to the Longwood Medical Area stop and walk east. If you get off at Northeastern, cross Huntington Avenue and go through the Krentzman Quadrangle to Ell Hall. Go in the main doors and King Husky will greet you immediately.

Take the MBTA’s Green Line to the Northeastern stop and walk west or to the Longwood Medical Area stop and walk east. If you get off at Northeastern, cross Huntington Avenue and go through the Krentzman Quadrangle to Ell Hall. Go in the main doors and King Husky will greet you immediately.

Then go back out to Huntington Avenue and turn left. At Forsyth Street, turn left again. Walk past Greenleaf Street and the College of Professional Studies. Turn right and Shillman Hall will be on the left. “A Man with a Cat Named Yitz” are waiting for you outside.

Finally, go back down Forsyth Street to Huntington Avenue and turn left. Walk past the Museum of Fine Arts and the Wentworth playing fields. Cross Louis Prang Street and look for the leopard on your left.

Boston’s Bronze Menagerie Series

  1. Bronze Rhinos
  2. Boston’s Animal Statues: Codfish
  3. Paint and Henry
  4. Bronze Teddy Bear
  5. Kensington Lions
  6. Boston’s Political Animals: Democratic Donkey
  7. Boston’s Political Animals: Jumbo the Elephant
  8. The Fenway’s Pronghorn Antelope
  9. The Lotta Fountain
  10. The Tortoise and the Hare and the Boston Marathon