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Kalamazoo Central High School
Everyday thousands of people pass by the
Community Education Center, otherwise known as “Old Central,”
located at South Westnedge Avenue and Vine Street, not realizing
that there has been a school on that site since 1858. The history
of the school and the buildings that have been a part of it, show
not only the changes that have happened in the community, but also
the changes that have happened in education.
In 1857 the Trustees in Kalamazoo purchased
five acres from Arad C. Balch at Vine and West Streets for $6500.00
and set off to build what became known as the Union School.
Previous to this, the village had four separate schools in four
separate districts. The State of Michigan passed a law that allowed
these school districts to combine into one union district. These early schools only covered what
could be compared to grades one through eight.
First building
Initially high
school education was private and expensive. However, when these
union schools were built, many districts, like Kalamazoo, began to
offer free high school education. Kellogg and Stevens did the carpentry work, and
F. and E. Thorpe did the masonry. On 10 November 1858 an article in
the Kalamazoo Telegraph described the opening on 6 December
of the new school which would be divided into primary, intermediate,
grammar and high school branches.
The Italianate building, which cost close to
$45,000, was then on the outskirts of the village. Large apple and
pear trees surrounded the building. A fence circled the structure,
not only to keep students in, but to keep animals out. Lizzie
Rollins Hoffman described the building fifty years later:
“Perfectly square,
surmounted by a cupola, its wide halls and
big gong; its well lighted rooms, especially the high
school
room with its elevated platform and the old-fashioned
clock
that ticked away the minutes and hours of our happy
school
days…”
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A Scene in the Old Union.
from The Delphian "Reminiscences of Fifty Years:
1859-1909, page 46. |
The Telegraph article goes into great
detail about the interior. Each floor held a variety of rooms
including recitation rooms that would accommodate anywhere from 150
to 200 students, with the third floor room seating 300. Years
later, Sarah Wadhams George said about that room “the blackboards
were so far away they taxed our sight.” Non-district students
were charged tuition, and all students had to pay extra for drawing,
painting and music classes. Not long after Kalamazoo’s Union School
opened, the State of Michigan allowed districts who had at least 200
students the right to create a high school and to approve taxes to
support it.
A year after the building opened there were 975
students attending the Union School, 146 in the high school
department, the majority of whom were women. Divided into four
quarters, the school year ran from the beginning of September until
the end of June. At this time the high school course took three
years. All students also took classes in a variety of subjects
including Algebra, English, History, Mental Philosophy (now known as
Psychology), Science and Economics. Promoting a student was based
both on written and oral examinations, open to the public at the end
of the fall and spring terms. Sarah Wadhams George remembered that
seniors could gather in room #23 on the third floor for study hours
although some were able to “vent their exuberance” there. Not long
after the Union School opened, the school offered coursework
preparing those students, mostly female, who wanted to become
educators themselves once they graduated. By about 1862-1863,
students were placed in graded classrooms that were grouped in
three, not four departments.
The high school students formed a Lyceum
Society and for many Friday evenings gathered to debate the issues
of the day. Although they debated such topics as women’s suffrage
and capital punishment, Sarah Wadhams George reported that it gave
some students a chance to walk home in the dark, “with a favorite
boy or girl at whom we scarcely dared glance during study hours.”
An issue these students could have debated was
one the community found itself in the center. In 1871 in circuit
court, three citizens brought suit against the Kalamazoo School
District maintaining that they should not be taxed to support high
school education. The Michigan Supreme Court in 1874 upheld the
circuit court’s ruling that school districts did have this right.
This important case, which guaranteed free public high schools,
continues to be known as the “Kalamazoo School Case.”
In the fall of 1870, an earthquake could be
felt in the village. Carrie Sweezey Goodchild remembered thirty
years later that students felt a “queer, dizzy sensation,” and
watched “the long chain on the south door …violently swinging back
and forth.” The students and teachers evacuated the building
immediately. As they gathered outside, she said all watched the
cupola hoping that it would collapse. It did not, but for the next
ten years debate raged about the building’s condition.
Second building
In June 1880 a committee of local builders who
closely examined the building and reported that the building could
not be repaired leading the Board of Education to approve its
demolition. Chicago architect E. S. Jennison designed both the new
high school and a new elementary school on the same site; Frederick
Miller from Grand Rapids was the contractor. The new elementary
school at this location became Vine Street Elementary.
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Kalamazoo High School, 1891-1892.
Probably photographed by W. S. White. Kalamazoo Public
Library Photo P-252. |
Completed in 1881 and opened in January, 1882,
the new high school became known as the Kalamazoo High School.
Parts of the Union School still lived; its bell hung in the new
building’s tower, and its cornerstone was placed somewhere in its
walls. Along with the bell tower with a decorative finial, the
brick Queen Anne structure had prominent entrances. Ten years
later, voters approved funds for a new Grammar School built next to
the High School and eventually connected to it.
As high school students arrived at school on
the morning of Monday, 1 February1897, they were greeted with the
sight of the building in flames. One unnamed student wrote twelve
years later, “When the roof and tower collapsed all felt subdued,
but their spirits rose at the announcement of a week’s vacation.”
This nameless student also reported after the fire a number of
“mourning gatherings” were held and “at one exclusive wailing party
extra portions of hot chocolate and biscuits were offered to the one
who could show her feelings most audibly.” The Grammar School, by
then known as the Annex, survived.
Students received only a few days of vacation
and were back in the classroom by Thursday meeting in the the
Y.M.C.A. building downtown. Some students hoped their grades would
rise due to lost records and papers, but teachers had their grade
books. Students had to walk to the Annex for such classes as
Physics.
Third building
Two weeks after the fire, voters approved
$20,000 for a new high school building which would contain twelve
classrooms, two laboratories and a 500-seat assembly room. The
Board accepted the plans of Saginaw architect Averton E. Munger and
awarded the construction contract to George H. Harris from
Kalamazoo. On 9 February1898, students and teachers were able to
walk through the new Richardsonian Romanesque high school with its
high-pitched roof, massive appearance and prominent, arched
entryways. One teacher said ten years later that “…as soon as the
doors were entered joy reigned supreme.” She continued, “As we
wandered through the spacious halls and large airy rooms our delight
increased. One child cried ecstatically, ‘Doesn’t it seem just like
heaven!’”
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The third high school building, from
Twenty Years 1904-1924, Western State Normal School,
page 13, mislabeled "Old Vine Street School." |
One year later, Kalamazoo became the first city
in Michigan where voters approved the funding of a manual training
program. Such classes had been offered in the schools previously,
but not at this level. The program would span from grade school
through high school. The 1891 Annex, was remodeled and renamed the
Manual Training School. Not long after this, the high school became
to be known as “Central High School.”
By 1909, the high school was overcrowded. On 5
June1911 voters gave the Board permission to raise $280,000 for a
new gymnasium and classroom buildings for the high school.
An article in the Kalamazoo Gazette
dated 8 February1912 said, “No city in the country will have a more
complete high school and manual training building than Kalamazoo…”
The new gymnasium, which was ready by October 1912, faced Dutton
Street and contained two gymnasiums, an indoor track and a swimming
pool. Built on the site of the 1891 Grammar School/Annex was a
4-story manual training/classroom building. Along with laboratories
and classrooms, there was a “model housekeeping suite” which had a
kitchen, dining and living rooms, laundry and bedroom for girls who
would be taught the care of each room.
Fourth building
It was felt that these buildings would take
care of any future student increase for the next twenty-five to
thirty years, but a mere nine years later overcrowding again
prompted the Board to ask for funding to build more classrooms and
voters approved the proposal on 29 June 1922 which also called for
the demolition of the 1898 high school building. Robinson and
Campau’s 1911 plans were used for the north wing. Local architect
Rockwell A. LeRoy designed a classroom building that would connect
the north wing to the gymnasium and also to the new auditorium also
designed by him. The two classroom buildings, completed in 1923,
would add sixty new rooms. It was estimated that the entire complex
would hold 1500 to 1800 students. The Kalamazoo Gazette
reported on 17 August 1922, “…the Central high school plant will in
the not far distant future be one of the finest and most complete in
Michigan.” The new auditorium, completed in 1924, seated close to
3,000 people and became more than just a location for school
productions; it became a community auditorium. It was the site for
the Kalamazoo Symphony, the Civic Players, and a venue for big band
concerts and traveling symphonies from Chicago, Cleveland, New York
and Boston. During its dedication in October, the Gazette
said, “It is immense, comfortable, atmospheric without frills;
indeed it is the embodiment which represents a great commonwealth of
opportunity.” In another article that month, the newspaper
commented on the entire complex, “Standing for what it does, it is
not an expense but an investment of the soundest kind.”
There were no major changes to the buildings
over the next thirty years, due mostly to the national economy and
World War II. In 1955 Miller-Davis Construction Company remodeled
the science laboratories, lecture rooms, locker rooms and swimming
pool from plans drawn by local architect M. C. J. Billingham. In 1960
the Kalamazoo Foundation funded an extensive renovation of the
auditorium, which received new seats, new lighting and new dressing
room facilities along with changes to the stage and the orchestra
pit.
Fifth building
Overcrowding once more was the reason the Board
of Education began in the mid-1960s to look at Central High School.
In 1960, the School District opened a second high school to the
south named Loy Norrix High School. Voters defeated a proposal in
1967 to replace Central High School, to expand Loy Norrix, to build
a new third high school, and to make improvements to other district
buildings.
On 16 December 1968 the Board approved a
smaller plan to build a new high school on Drake Road and to enlarge
Loy Norrix that did not require a public vote. Architect Jerry
Klingele from Louis C. Kingscott & Associates designed the new
building; Johnson-Klein, Inc. built it. Fourteen different names
were suggested for the new structure, but the new school would be
called Kalamazoo Central High School.
Along with the committees that studied the
future of high school in Kalamazoo, other committees were looking
into the explosive subject of how the schools in the city could be
racially balanced. There was a great deal of unrest in certain
schools, Central being one of them. Studies showed that there was a
racial disparity between schools. For example, in 1969 16.9% of the
student population at Central was African-American as opposed to
1.6% at Loy Norrix. The Board approved a plan in January 1971 for
the fall to racially balance the schools using busing, although a
new Board overturned it. The NAACP filed a class-action lawsuit in
federal court against the District that resulted in an opinion that
implemented the plan for the fall of 1971. The case, known as
Oliver v. Kalamazoo Board of Education, made it all the way to
the United States Supreme Court which, like the United States Court
of Appeals, rejected the School District’s appeal to overturn the
plan for court-ordered busing to achieve racial balance.
The new Kalamazoo Central High School opened to
students on 31 January1972 for the start of a new semester. Sitting
on fifty-nine acres, the building had four “pods” which held spaces
for academic, athletic and other purposes. Students continued to
use the auditorium at the old building, renamed that same year for
Howard Chenery, a long-time drama teacher at Central who served as
the auditorium’s manager and had been heavily involved with
Kalamazoo’s theater community. In 2005, Central High School added a
new auditorium at the Drake Road campus.
The old Central High School building was
renamed the Community Education Center in 1972. Since then it has
been home to a variety of Kalamazoo Public School programs and
offices including, since 1987, the Kalamazoo Area Math and Science
Center. Chenery Auditorium continues to be a site for local and
visiting performances for all ages and is a favorite venue for the
Irving S. Gilmore Keyboard Festival held every two years.
Times have changed, buildings and people have
come and gone, but since 1858, the main purpose of the buildings
that have been a part of this site has not changed. It should give
Kalamazoo a sense of pride that thousands of young people have
walked through the hallways of these buildings, past and present,
hopefully with a desire to learn, helped by thousands of teachers
with a desire to teach.
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For further information, we suggest
these sources:
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| H 371.8976 K14.1 |
The Delphian: Reminiscences of fifty
years 1859-1909 |
| H 379.774
K14.1 |
Kalamazoo Public Schools. Board of
Education. Minutes (various years) |
| File |
History Room Subject File: Kalamazoo
Public Schools Scrapbooks |
| File |
History Room
Subject File: Kalamazoo Public Schools – Kalamazoo Central
High School |
| H 371.8976 K14.3 |
Kalamazoo
Central High School Building Chronology. Compiled by Lynn
Houghton, Kalamazoo, 2007. |
Written by Lynn Houghton, Kalamazoo Public
Library staff, December 2007. Page launched March 2008.
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