Continuing on a previous posted blog, here are another ten facts about our county not readily known by most residents. Test your skills and see how many you know. Better yet make a commitment to visit these notable county landmarks before 2016 ends.
1. The Casement-Jennings House in Painesville built in the late 19th century has had only four owners, featured central heating and a/c, a first of the era and had Susan B. Anthony visit there often.
2. The two oldest stone quarried homes in the county date back to 1840 and 1841 respectively. The first is located on Ravenna Road and was a one-room schoolhouse. The second building in Kirtland was once a farm homestead known as the Vineyard House and today is home to the Herb Society of America. Both are open to visitors.
3. Wayward spirits have been reported to inhabit several dorms, a music building and the main college hall on this Lake County college campus located on Mentor Avenue in Painesville.
4. This City of Millionaires features the former homes or sites of Coulby, Squire, McKinney, Corrigan and Rockefeller. Do you know these properties?
5. October programs share the ghostly stories of Robbie Babcock and Sentinel the cat at this iconic lighthouse in Fairport Harbor. Will you be attending the 7-9 pm program on October 18 or 25th?
6. This barn theater is one of the few remaining in the country. Located in Madison and dating back nearly 80 years, it features four live stage shows annually. Jim Backus, Tom Hanks and Dustin Hoffman have performed there.
7. The entrance to this famous summer home was located at an interurban stop that sat in front of the current Olive Garden site on Mentor Avenue. Do you know the name of this famous mansion?
8. She was Mentor's only women mayor and was affectionately known as 'Gramma G' - do you know this visionary's real name?
9. A Nike Missle site was located in this county city.
10. This park was the first one to be acquired by newly formed Lake Metroparks in the late 50s. It has a rich history in UGRR lore and Eber Howe history.
Thursday, September 29, 2016
Monday, September 26, 2016
The Legacy of One-Room Schoolhouses
Dotting the back county roads, the casual traveler often
passes by abandoned or second-third use repurposed remnants of a past era. These aging buildings may bring back
remembered images, be seen as merely crumbling structures or reconnect you with
a by-gone county era. Such is the
case with three unique buildings of Americana found in our Lake County
communities.
One - room schoolhouses are a part of American history
dating back nearly 350 years.
First suggested in 1647 (Massachusetts), the Federal Land Act of 1785
and the Section 16 Act set up support of schools as an offshoot of The
Northwest Ordinances. An 1802
draft of Ohio’s constitution made reference to schools. Even Thomas Jefferson championed free
public education.
Prior to 1820 exisitng schools were mostly private by
design. The cost of a term,
usually three dollars was a luxury well beyond the reach of most citizens. Yet it is interesting to note that
Ohio’s population in 1803 was nearly 60,000- Ohio being one of the first states
developed from the Northwest Territory era. This led to an 1825 law where free education became the
rule. Public School was now in session in the soon to be Lake County.
Early pioneer
schools sprang up. These schools
were of a crude log design and often a 30’x50’ size at best. An 1840 census indicated 407,000
children ages 6-15 attended schools.
Usually townships were divided into 6 or 7 sections hence the need for 6
to 7 schools. School terms ran May
thru September and November thru April.
Within a few years, the first pioneer schools were replaced by buildings
now made of stone. The Old Stone
Schoolhouse (1840) on Ravenna Road was Concord’s third school but the first
quarried stone structure in the county.
By the late 1900’s schools made of red-clay brick followed. The Red Schoolhouse in Willoughby and
School #2 in Kirtland Township are examples of that era of construction. One- room schools remained in the
forefront of early public school education until approximately 1920. At that time urban schools challenged
these mostly rural institutions.
Limited curriculum, facility size and rising standards for teacher
certification became issues that only larger urban- based districts could
combat. Concord Township’s nine
one-room schools were shuttered by 1924 and a new one building district school
opened in 1925 to better serve all students. A new era in education was at hand.
Lake County’s One Room Schoolhouses Still Standing –Key
Facts
Old Stone Schoolhouse
–
Built in 1840,
open from 1841-1923, one of nine in its hey-day. Located on Ravenna Road in Concord Township, it is a
township museum maintained by the local historic society and open to the
public.
Children’s Schoolhouse
– Lake Metroparks
Originally known as Riverside School #2, located on Baldwin
Road in Kirtland Township, opened in 1894. Donated in 1988 by the Anthony S. Ocepala Family to Lake
Metroparks. It is open to the
public for educational programs only.
Little Red Schoolhouse-
Currenly located at 5040 Shankland Road in Willoughby, it
was built in 1901 and situated thru 1923 on the current YMCA site. Last used in the 1940s, it is now a
three building complex maintained by the local historical society. It was moved to its current location in
1975.
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