WHS: Growing Pains
By Dick P. Morrison,
WHS Educator
1900, the turn
of the century. The Midway area of St. Paul was becoming more than just
the “edge of town.” About this time, the founding fathers of Hamline University
decided to buy several acres of farmland and build what they expected would
become a major educational institution. They purposely chose a northern
point near the Midway area so there would be plenty of room for expansion.
It was a growing
community. To the immediate south, several roads already had been
named, and there were an ever increasing number of shops, lumber and millwork
companies, dwellings, and even a few wood sidewalks being built.
Minnehaha and Hamline avenues – even Snelling Avenue – had wood sidewalks
skirting one side. University Avenue was a graded gravel road; Thomas
Avenue was ungraded.
The tract bordered
by Snelling, Minnehaha, Lexington and Thomas avenues was prairie land where
Water House and Peck dairies pastured their cows. The area was treeless
except around the Home of the Good Shepherd – from Hamline Avenue, one
could see all the way to Dale Street.
Between 1900 and
1920, the Midway neighborhood quickly filled with family dwellings. Within
this 20 year period, an important community developed. A high school and
a number of grade schools now served the area; however, a junior high school
still seemed to be needed.
The city block
bordered by Albert, Blair, Lafond, and Pascal streets was partially vacant,
containing just 16 houses and 10 garages, and seemed a logical place for
a new junior high school. Condemnation proceedings were initiated: houses
were sold or moved. The total net cost of the property to the St.
Paul Public School Board was $76,825.39 – a startling figure in relation
to today’s real estate prices.
Construction of
a new junior high school began in 1924 and was completed by the time classes
started in the fall of 1925. The building held 875 students and cost
$360,091.96.
Two interesting
facts are part of this beginning: The floor plans for Wilson and
Marshall high schools are identical; and the original blueprints show the
plans under the name of Hamline Junior High School with the name Hamline
scratched out and Wilson written above it.
By 1938, barely
12 school years later, demographic studies indicated the need for a second
senior high school. Also, the six-year, three-year, three-year schedule
for elementary, junior high and senior high students had lost popularity
in many educational circles. Wilson opened in 1938 as a high school
with a four-year program, freshmen through seniors. Wilson students
who had expected to go to Central in the fall found themselves back at
Wilson. The first four-year-only class entered in 1940 and graduated
in 1944. Several times money was raised and allocated to remove the
lintel proclaiming the building a junior high. To this day, the lintel
remains!
The transition
from a junior high school to a senior high school was simply accomplished.
Most of the teachers stayed on; room assignments were given befitting certain
subjects and befitting the high school curriculum.
Little was done
to the physical plant, and for years this has been noted by countless ex-students
reminiscing at the reunions. Many recall the size of the gym and
the fact that it had to serve boys and girls separately. Others remember
the height of lavatory mirrors, the small lockers, and some of the room
sizes, especially for band and choir. The auditorium could never
fit the entire student body at one time, and there were years when even
three assemblies had to be held.
For many years,
the wall between the auditorium stage and the gymnasius was made of wood
slats and was removed for large stage productions. By the late 1940’s,
this wall was replaced by brick with only an odd sized door as an entry
into the gym. Many a senior on Senior Honor Day had to duck through
this opening while parading into the front rows of the auditorium.
A study proposed
that the building should become a junior high again by 1952 or 1954.
The proposal was shelved, and in 1955 more than $100,000 was spent to rehabilitate
and remodel the structure. Heating systems were updated, a band and
choir room was created out of the old coal room, new locker and shower
areas were built, new divider walls were erected, and everything was painted.
The high school had been given a facelift, reminding students and faculty
that there were a few years left in the old girl yet.
It was not until
1964 that Wilson returned to junior high status, 26 years after becoming
a high school. Some of the faculty remained, but the majority went to other
high schools in the city system.
In preparation
for the change, reconstruction and repair of the building began immediately.
Many new rooms, reference and study areas, and meeting facilities had to
be created within the confines of the old building. To former students
and faculty members who visit there today, just a hint of the old school
can be seen – faculty rooms have been redesigned, some large rooms now
are divided into many small rooms, window spaces have been bricked in,
and solid doors have replaced those with windowpanes. The playground
is smaller, making way for faculty off – street parking.
By the late 1970’s,
studies indicated that the building, probably had outlived its usefulness
and should be condemned, perhaps even demolished and some new type of community
building constructed on the space. Once this information became public
knowledge, a number of civic – minded groups and deeply interested neighbors
became involved in dialogues with Independent School Board 625. These
groups argued that the building had many good years left, and with some
repairs and paint it could continue its usefulness to the community.
This sentiment won over opponents, and although Wilson as a junior high
ended in the spring of 1981, it opened its doors once again in the fall
as a new type of school. Using a more “traditional” approach to education,
the Benjamin E. Mays Fundamental School serves students in kindergarten
through eighth grade. Specific assignments, definite homework, discipline,
dress codes, and polite speech are essentials of the fundamental school.
As to the building,
it recently acquired a colorful paint job with interesting patterns.
One
student, a member of the Class of 1944, returned to the school as a faculty
member at the invitation of his former speech teacher, Grace Mackey, and
his principal, Russell Peterson. That student, Dick P. Morrison,
remained there for 17 years, leaving in 1964 when the school reverted to
a junior high.