Built 1867 Opened 1867 Phone +1 207-761-0321 | NRHP Reference # 82000749 Area 1,200 m² Added to NRHP 12 April 1982 | |
![]() | ||
Location 248–264 Congress Street, Portland, Maine Address 248 Congress St, Portland, ME 04101, USA Architectural styles Tudor Revival architecture, Italianate architecture Similar Eastern Cemetery, Woodman Building, Abyssinian Meeting House, Nathan Clifford School, Baxter Building |
The North School is an historic former school at 248 Congress Street in Portland, Maine. Built in 1867, it was the first primary school in the state to separate students by grade, and was the largest primary school in the state when built. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. It was converted into subsidized housing for seniors by the City of Portland.
Description and history
The North School is located in Portland's East Bayside, India Street neighborhood, on the southeast side of Congress Street, just west of the Eastern Cemetery. It is a three story brick building with Italianate styling. A four story tower projects from its southwest-facing front facade, capped by a square turret with clock. Windows in the tower are predominantly tall round-arch windows, while windows elsewhere are in part similar, with some replaced by bands of rectangular sash. When built, the building also had a mansard roof; this was removed in 1920-22, when the windows were also altered.
The school was built in 1867 to a design by Levi Newcomb, in the wake of Portland great 1866 fire, and was the city's largest municipal project of the period. It was the first school in the state to implement the principles of education reformer Henry Barnard, which included the separation of students by grade. In 1894 its attic was fitted with woodworking apparatus for vocational education, and its 1920-22 alterations were designed by John Calvin Stevens. The school remained in use as a primary school until the mid-1970s. It has since been converted into subsidized senior housing.