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The One Room School House Project of Southwestern College in Winfield, Kansas, includes listings and information on some 880 schools throughout the state and nation. The information, pictures, and stories included in this site have been collected and sent to the project by researchers and historians from across America.
Glebe Schoolhouse is a historic one-room school building located near Summerdean, Augusta County, Virginia.It was built in 1830, as a one-room, brick schoolhouse with a gable roof and gable-end chimney.
The Republican Schoolhouse, also known as Little White Schoolhouse or Birthplace of the Republican Party, is a historic former one-room schoolhouse now located at 1074 West Fond Du Lac Street in Ripon, Wisconsin. Built in 1853, it was designated a National Historic Landmark for its role in the 1854 founding of the Republican Party. [1]
The Oldest Wooden School House is a wooden structure located at 14 St. George Street in St. Augustine, Florida near the city gate. It is touted as being the oldest wooden school building in the United States. The exact date of construction is unknown, but it first appears on tax records in 1716.
The Brick School House is a local history museum in Coventry, Connecticut. The small brick building functioned as a one-room school from 1825 to 1953. It is the only one-room schoolhouse open to the public in Connecticut. [1] The Brick School House is owned and managed by the Coventry Historical Society. The interior features nineteenth-century ...
Dayton's Corners School; Delphi Village School; Diamond Point School; District 6 Schoolhouse; District 10 Schoolhouse; District Number 7 School; District School 2 (Coventryville, New York) District School 4 (Coventry, New York) District School No. 19; District School No. 20; District School Number Five; District Schoolhouse No. 2
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Two-room masonry school built c. 1914 in Osgood, Ohio. A 1909 school planning guide from New Mexico suggests a school room be no bigger than 24 by 30 feet (7.3 m × 9.1 m) which would seat up to 40 students, as "a teacher having charge of more than this number cannot do satisfactory work - especially in a rural school".