History & Culture · New York City
The Hall of Fame gives the Bronx a colonnade of civic memory
The Hall of Fame for Great Americans at Bronx Community College turns University Heights into a public argument about memory and recognition.
Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026
Hall of Fame for Great Americans gives the Bronx a civic-memory landscape that is stranger and richer than a simple campus landmark. Bronx Community College’s materials describe the hall as a historic institution honoring figures across fields, set within the architecture of the University Heights campus.
The colonnade itself does the work: busts, names, old ideals of greatness, and the changing question of who a democracy chooses to remember. University Heights holds classrooms, commutes, and a public monument to national memory.
That gives the Bronx college geography real depth. A walk through campus can run into an argument about recognition, history, architecture, and public honor. It is a very New York kind of place: formal, imperfect, layered, and still asking better questions than a simple landmark plaque would ask.
The setting matters too. University Heights, Bronx Community College, and the old colonnade put national memory inside daily campus life. That makes the place feel less sealed off and more alive, because the monument has to share space with students, commutes, classes, and the borough around it.