Girish Mahajan (Editor)

District Six Schoolhouse

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Built
  
1833 (1833)

Address
  
Shoreham, VT 05770, USA

Area
  
4,000 m²

Added to NRHP
  
18 August 1977

NRHP Reference #
  
77000093

Opened
  
1833

Architectural style
  
Federal architecture

District Six Schoolhouse

Location
  
Elmendorf Rd., Shoreham, Vermont

The District Six Schoolhouse is a historic school building on Elmendorf Road in Shoreham, Vermont. Built about 1833 and now converted into a residence, this modest stone structure is one of Vermont's oldest surviving district schoolhouses. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977.

Description

The former District Six Schoolhouse stands in a rural area of northeastern Shoreham, on the southwest side of Elmendorf Road. It is a modest single-story stone structure, measuring just 20 by 25 feet (6.1 m × 7.6 m), with a gabled roof. It is built of course rubble limestone and covered by a standing seam metal roof. The street-facing facade has two bays, with the entrance in a recess on the left and a sash window on the right, and has a half-round window in the gable. The southeast roof face has a gabled wood-frame dormer, part of alterations made to convert the building to residential use. A single-story wood frame ell extends to the rear.

The school was built in 1833 out of locally quarried limestone, and is a good example of late Federal period vernacular architecture. It is one of a number of surviving stone district schools in the region. It remained in use as a schoolhouse until the 1940s. After standing vacant for some years, it was rehabilitated and converted into a residence.

References

District Six Schoolhouse Wikipedia