Recently
I was looking through some Algona High School yearbooks from the 1920’s and
came across some photos of the inside of the Bryant school building. Although I never attended Bryant, I used to
play summer softball on the city little league as a child and often practiced
on the ball diamond there. From my
youthful perspective, I thought the building looked huge and imposing. These interior photos piqued my curiosity
about the building and its history and so I of course had to do a little
digging.
From the1922 AHS Yearbook |
Extra Room Needed
In
1898, the Algona School Board was considering prospective sites for a new high
school. There were two school buildings
in use at that time. The Central
schoolhouse was located where the building formerly known as the O.B. Laing Middle
School is currently situated. It had
been built in 1885 and housed every grade until 1896 when the Third Ward
schoolhouse was erected. Although that
relieved some of the overcrowding in Central, it became apparent only two years
later that it would be necessary to erect a building dedicated to housing the
high school classes.
The
building of the new school was not without controversy, however. Did you know that the school was almost built
in other locations? Although the site
finally chosen was the one most preferred, it was also the most expensive at
$6,400. There were four owners of the
property. C. E. Heise owned four lots
and wanted $3,000; Thomas Little owned a house and lot for which he was asking
$650; Will Haggard owned an empty lot priced at $500; and finally David A.
Haggard placed a value of $2,250 on the two lots he owned on which his house,
barn and outbuildings were located.
Due
to the costs involved, the board also considered building on a half block on
east State Street which could be secured for $2,000. Their other possible choice was the full
block west of the old Chrischilles homestead on the hill west of city hall
(approximately where the Water Works building currently stands) at a cost of
$3,000.
Location Chosen
By
September of 1898, the board decided on the Heise property as the location of
the new high school building. They
scaled back on the amount of property they wanted to buy which divided some of
the lots in half and hired lawyers to deal with the owners. When that didn’t work, they had the ground
condemned and the appraisals came in at considerably less than the asking
prices. One of the owners, D.A. Haggard,
had special circumstances due to the fact that when the school was built, the building
itself was placed in such a manner that the east side of the school was within
a few feet of his home. Heise and D.A. Haggard both appealed and the
cases went on for several years.
The
lawsuits didn’t stop the construction of the new state-of-the-art school
building. Bids were let in August of
1898 and construction began soon thereafter.
The need for the new building was great.
That fall Central School was so crowded that the high school classes
were moved to the Old Normal School building which was located a few blocks
northwest of the current Catholic Church site.
Unusually cold weather occurred that winter with temperatures at times
between 30 and 40 degrees below zero.
The old stoves in the building were unreliable and entirely inadequate to
combat the frigid winds. A rickety stove
pipe even came crashing down on several occasions jeopardizing the safety of
the students.
Bryant Opens
It
had been hoped that the school would be ready in time for the beginning of
classes in September of 1899, but due to construction delays, the building was
finally ready for classes in November of that year. The high school occupied the larger room on
the east in the second story. The seats
were of oak and adjustable as to height.
The northwest room on the same floor was used for recitation
purposes. That room was furnished with
cane-seated chairs with arm rests.
An
article published in the Algona Republican on March 21, 1900, described it as
follows:
“The Bryant building
constructed in 1899 is the home of the High School. Besides the High School rooms, five grade
rooms are provided, three of which are as yet unfinished. This beautiful structure with its Colonial
architecture surrounded by native oaks is an ornament to our city. The foundation is of pressed Lehigh brick,
while the superstructure is made from Twin City buff brick. The building has a slate roof, cement floors
in the basement, and flush water closets.
The heat supplied is steam, furnished by both direct and indirect
radiation. Natural slate blackboards are
used exclusively. The walls and ceilings
are beautifully tinted with three shades of green. Water is supplied to all floors. Owing to a lack of available funds, the
laboratory is not yet provided with desks and suitable appliances for science
work. The expenses for this property are
as follows: Contract for building,
something over $14,000; for heating and plumbing, $2,500; for architect, $500;
for grounds, about $3,200; for furniture, $450. Besides this was extra pipe
work in the garret, sidewalks, grading of grounds, etc. These expenses aggregate $21,000. More than another thousand will be needed to
complete the unfinished rooms.”
Captioned "After a Busy Day" |
The Lab |
Mock Political Convention Held in the Assembly Room |
In the column "Tidbits from
Evelyn" printed in the January 20, 1955 edition of the Upper Des Moines,
the columnist shared her memories which provide a good description of the interior of the school in early days:
"Bryant
was not so pretentious when I went there. The addition had not been
built, fewer studies were offered, there was no gym, no domestic science
taught, no study hall. Assembly room took in the entire east 3rd of the
building, a small library opened off this, and wide halls and cloak halls and
the stairways took the middle section. Two class rooms were on the second
floor with the assembly, chemistry lab and physics doubling and located in the
northwest corner. Miss Kern had the southwest class room.
Downstairs
Miss Wallace had the southeast room for her kindergarten youngsters--or it may
have been primary grade. Miss McCoy was across the hall in the northeast
corner, Supt. Overmyer had the middle room facing the front stairs, and other
class rooms were in the northwest and southwest corners, divided by the
basement stairs."
A wing was later added on the north side of the building in 1912 at a cost of $49,000, completing the structure as I remember it. The addition contained the first gymnasium. I have been told that entry to the gym itself was rather peculiar. The only accesses to the gym floor were through the locker rooms. Public seating consisted of bleachers that were mounted to the wall with the bottom seat located several feet above the floor, sort of on a platform. Entry doors to that seating were at the top. Rather than go all the way down to the locker rooms to enter the gym floor, students often took a shortcut by hopping over the bar at the bottom of the bleachers and dropping down onto the floor.
The Kitchen |
Mr. J. F. Overmyer seated in the office |
The
new Bryant schoolhouse was completed just in time to be prominently featured in
the book “Picturesque Algona.” The building went on to serve thousands
of children during its lifetime. It was
demolished in 1980 to make room for a newer, single story structure that cost
over one million dollars to build and where children, including one of my
grandsons, continue to receive a first-class education.
Bryant School in 2015 |
The arch from the old school entry was preserved until early in 2015 when it became unstable and was removed. Though the last remaining memorial of this building is now gone, I am glad we have these photos to document its long and glorious life.
Until next time,
Until next time,
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Great photos and Great story!
ReplyDeleteI remember Bryant well! I thought it was such a neat school when I attended there from 1st - 6th Grade.
ReplyDeleteI attended Bryant k thru 6 grade. Teachers I had were McVay, Bonecker, Patterson, Easter, Plain, and Manske. I remember the gym hidden away and the art room in the basement. I also remember a stage in one of the class rooms. I attended 1963- 1969. It was a beautiful old building
ReplyDeleteForgot Goldie Erickson for 5th grade!
DeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteI believe my grandfather, Frank H. Wilper May have graduated in about 1898. Do the school records go back that far? I would love to know who I might ask.
ReplyDeleteThanks.
Ron Wilper