Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Hoosac Street School

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Built
  
1887 (1887)

NRHP Reference #
  
87002547

Opened
  
1887

Architect
  
Charles T. Rathbun

Built by
  
Walters & Fuller

Address
  
Adams, MA 01220, USA

Added to NRHP
  
10 February 1988

Hoosac Street School

Location
  
20 Hoosac St., Adams, Massachusetts

Architectural styles
  
Queen Anne style architecture, Colonial Revival architecture

Similar
  
Forest Park Country Club, Mount Greylock, Quaker Meetinghouse, Wellfleet Driveā€‘In Theater, Congregational Church of West Stoc

The Hoosac Street School is a historic school building at 20 Hoosac Street in Adams, Massachusetts. Built in 1887, it is a good local example of transitional Queen Anne/Colonial Revival architecture, and a significant reminder of the town's rapid growth in the late 19th century. It was listed on the National Historic Register in 1988.

Description and history

The former Hoosac Street School stands in a mixed residential and commercial area east of Adams' downtown area, at the northeast corner of Hoosac and North Hoosac Streets. It is a two story brick structure with a hip roof topped by a cupola. The main facade is divided into three sections, the center one, which contains the entrance, projecting slightly. The flanking sections have pairs of sash windows on each level; the center section has the entrance, flanked by small windows and sheltered by a small gabled portico, on the first level, and a double window topped by an elliptical window flanked by narrow windows of equal height on the second.

The school was built in 1887, when Adams was experiencing burgeoning growth due the growth of its industrial capacity. In addition to general population growth occasioned by the improved economy, the need for additional schools was prompted by state requirements mandating education for children to the age of sixteen. Along with several other schools of the period that have survived, it was built in a Queen Anne/Stick style. It was designed by Charles Rathbun of Pittsfield, and completed at a cost of $20,000. The land it occupies was previously farmland. It remained in use as a primary school until 1981, when all of the town's elementary schools were consolidated into a single facility.

References

Hoosac Street School Wikipedia