Spring Hill Elementary School

Coordinates: 40°27′54.62″N 79°59′22.10″W / 40.4651722°N 79.9894722°W / 40.4651722; -79.9894722
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Spring Hill Elementary School
Spring Hill Elementary School is located in Pittsburgh
Spring Hill Elementary School
Location of the Spring Hill Elementary School in Pittsburgh
Location1351 Damas Street (Spring Hill (Pittsburgh)), Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Coordinates40°27′54.62″N 79°59′22.10″W / 40.4651722°N 79.9894722°W / 40.4651722; -79.9894722
AreaSpring Hill
Built/founded1896
ArchitectMarion Steen
Governing body/ownerPittsburgh Public Schools

The Spring Hill Elementary School is located at 1351 Damas Street in the Spring Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The building was first constructed in 1896 in the Classical Revival style and serves as the elementary school for residents of the Spring Hill area.[1]

History[edit]

The current school was originally constructed as the Seventh Ward Public School and designed by architect Joseph Stillburg [2] in the then Allegheny City.[3] The neighborhood of Spring Hill was settled predominantly by German immigrants, one of whom, Damas Lutz owned the land on what is now Damas Street, and he was the one to sell the land for the original construction of the two-story brick school.[4] In 1907 Allegheny City was annexed into the City of Pittsburgh which resulted in a shift of boundaries and wards. This effected the Spring Hill area and by 1925 the school became known as the Spring Hill Elementary School after the area in which it was based.[5] Also with the annexation into the City of Pittsburgh, there was a substantial two-story addition added to the school in 1908, doubling its size.[6] The building remained the same until substantial alterations occurred in 1936. These changes were known as the Federal Public Works Project Docket PA 1156 due to the fact that the Pittsburgh School Board's building staff and program were funded by the federal government at this time due to the Great Depression.[7] The architect for these 1936 renovations was Marion Steen, the Pittsburgh School Board's staff architect and Assistant Superintendent of Buildings at the time. These renovations modernized the interior and significantly altered the exterior which has remained the same till this day.[8] The last changes occurred in 1991 when the architecture firms of Akers, Erwin, Thompson, and Gasparella made extensive renovations to the interior, modernizing it. The building was nominated in 2018 to become a City Historic Landmark by Preservation Pittsburgh.

Architecture[edit]

The architecture of the Spring Hill Elementary School is most notable for how it reflects the history of public school design in Allegheny and Pittsburgh. The alterations to the school are illustrative of the changes in ideological and architectural approaches to urban education. The first school building was designed by the City of Allegheny and was representative of typical Victorian schoolhouses of the era. The annexation into Pittsburgh shifted the school from being a symbol of the community to part of the city.[9] The changes in the 1930s also represented an era in which the federal government was needed for improvements, and the school needed modernizing. Today the school consists of two-wings, one of which was first constructed in 1896 and the other in 1908. The wings are joined by a one-story connector and are rectangular, made of red brick and sandstone foundations.

Gallery[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Spring Hill Elementary School". Preservation Pittsburgh Nominations. 27 April 2018.
  2. ^ "Spring Hill School Reserve Township Proposals 5". Pittsburgh Dispatch. 21 May 1890. p. 3.
  3. ^ "Spring Hill Elementary Nominated for Historic Landmark Status". Preservation Pittsburgh. 18 May 2018.
  4. ^ Yanosko, James W. and Edward W. Around Troy Hill, Spring Hill, and Reserve Township. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing, 2011.
  5. ^ Pittsburgh Public Schools, Facilities Division. Spring Hill School plans, specifications, and photographs, 1913-1936.
  6. ^ Pittsburgh Board of Education Survey Commission, Thomas E. Finegan, Director. “A Study of the Educational Department of the Pittsburgh Public Schools.” Pittsburgh: Board of Public Education, 1928.
  7. ^ Donnelly, Lu, and Aurand, Martin. National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form: “Pittsburgh Public Schools Thematic Group.” Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, 1986.
  8. ^ Tannler, Albert. “Marion M. Steen,” Career summary and bibliography. Pittsburgh History & Landmarks Foundation, 2001.
  9. ^ Pittsburgh Department of City Planning. “A Community Profile of Spring Hill.” August 1974. Retrieved August 30, 2016.