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HS Board

September 24, 2015

Watch The New Central School Fund-Raising Video

Watch the video!

schoolhousewebIn their never-flagging effort to raise the final funds necessary to complete the restoration of the 1896 one-room Central School and open it to school groups and the general public, the Mount Prospect Historical Society is taking to social media and even crowd-funding.

Members of the Society wrote and produced a short video about why the re-opening of the historic District 57 school should matter to everyone and enlisted the help of Lions Park School fourth grader Nolan Hahn and his neighbor and friend, Anna Toneva, a sixth grader at Lincoln Junior High, who both appear in the video.

St. Paul Lutheran School third grade teacher Deb Rittle, a member of the Society’s board of directors and author of the curriculum which has already been developed for the restored schoolhouse, is also featured.

The video has been posted on the Society’s two websites, www.mtphist.org and www.yourcentralschool.org and its Facebook page at www.facebook.com/mphistory.  The Society has also launched a Go Fund Me crowd-funding site (www.gofundme.com/centralschoolhouse) and the video can be seen there.

The video is also expected to be shown in local schools that are participating in the October “Cents for Central School” campaign to collect spare change for the restoration effort and it may even appear on the local cable channel, MPTV.

“Central School means a lot to me because I want to see part of our Mount Prospect history come back,” explained Hahn when asked about his participation.   Hahn was the 2015 winner of the Celestial Celebration Rising Star Award, bestowed by Mount Prospect’s Special Events Commission.  He was honored for his work making jewelry and selling it for the benefit of the historic schoolhouse.

For more information, phone 847-392-9006.

Filed Under: Breaking News, Schoolhouse

September 5, 2015

View our new video for the Schoolhouse GoFundMe Campaign!

Watch the video!

 

Filed Under: Schoolhouse

September 12, 2012

A Walk Through the Past

by Roberta Skelton

A few weeks ago the local journalist Jean Murphy included in her column a call for people who remembered the original Central School to contact the Historical Society to reminisce about the building. One of the people who contacted the Society was Roberta Skelton, who had not only attended the school, but had also been one of the early members of Saint John’s Episcopal Church.

She had moved to Mount Prospect as a small child in 1935 and started first grade in the original Central School in 1937. The second Central School, or the Central Standard School, had been built about ten years earlier, but as the community grew the school district had run into space concerns again. As the original Central School was still standing on the same lot, it was pressed back into service and was used for the first grade for a number of years. Ms. Skelton remembered that the students would enter the building through the back door, a door that is still on the building, although no longer used. She also remembered her teacher, Miss Bloom, and that the first grade students did not sit at desks, but rather at tables. She confirmed what we had been told before, that the bell in the tower is from one of the last steam trains that traveled along the Chicago Northwestern tracks. She was able to flush the story out a bit more by remembering that the bell had been secured for the school by John Pohlman, the first station master in Mount Prospect and a good friend of William Busse who was responsible for the organization of School District 57 and the construction of the Central School. Ms. Skelton also talked about how the one room school was heated by a large, rectangular, wood burning stove at the front of the class, which was better than the pot bellied stove that had been there earlier. However, when the school was moved, the stove was removed and it was discovered that the stove had charred the floor boards and that the building had probably come within inches of burning down.

Ms. Skelton was one of the last students to go to school in the building. Shortly after she moved into the second grade the Central Standard School was expanded to hold all the students in Mount Prospect and the original Central School was sold to Saint John’s and moved. The original Central School was sold for $750, which even in that day was pretty cheap. School District 57 sold it at this price with the understanding that the building would be moved off the property, very similar to the way the building was sold to the Mount Prospect Historical Society. A developer had given Saint John’s a lot to move the building onto and soon the move was under way. Saint John’s was a very small church at this time and could not afford an extensive renovation of the Central School building. When the building was moved, the vibrations caused all the plaster to crumble on the walls, so that when it arrived at its new home the walls were the naked lathe boards. For a time, Saint John’s covered the walls with burlap until they could raise the money to have the walls re-plastered. The church got by on what it had and a lot of dedication from the original members. The first pews for the church had been donated by other churches in the area and did not all match, while the alter was built by church members. Many other repairs to the building were done by church members.

The Central School became the first permanent home of Saint John’s Episcopal Church, although the Episcopal Women’s Guild of Mount Prospect had founded Saint John’s a couple years before they bought the Central School. They had been meeting temporarily in the VFW hall. When they moved into their permanent home, Ms. Skelton became the first child baptized in the permanent home of the church, making her both a first and a last for the building.

It was a pleasure speaking with Ms. Skelton, if any other members would like to come forward, please call the office.

Filed Under: Essays on Mount Prospect

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Mount Prospect Historical Society
101 South Maple Street
Mount Prospect, IL 60056
847.392.9006
info@mtphistory.org

The Mount Prospect Historical Society is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that is committed to preserving the history of Mount Prospect, IL, through artifacts, photographs and both oral and written memories of current and former residents and businesspeople.  On its campus in the heart of the Village, the Society maintains the 1906 Dietrich Friedrichs house museum, the ADA-accessible Dolores Haugh Education Center and the 1896 one-room Central School, which was moved to the museum campus in 2008, renovated and opened to the public in 2017, the 100-year anniversary of the Village.

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