Paul Hayne School: Difference between revisions

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|district = [[Birmingham City Schools]]
|district = [[Birmingham City Schools]]
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The '''Paul Hayne School''' or '''Paul Hayne Opportunity High School''' (originally '''Southside Grammar School''') was a former [[Birmingham City Schools|Birmingham city school]] located on the southeast corner of [[5th Avenue South]] and [[20th Street South|20th Street]] (on the present site of the [[Kirklin Clinic]]). It was constructed in [[1886]] at a cost of $60,000 and later expanded.
The '''Paul Hayne School''' or '''Paul Hayne Opportunity High School''' (originally '''Southside Grammar School''') was a former [[Birmingham City Schools|Birmingham city school]] located on the northwest corner of [[Block 173]], which is the southeast corner of the intersection of [[5th Avenue South]] and [[20th Street South|20th Street]],on the present site of the [[Kirklin Clinic]]. It was constructed in [[1885]] at a cost of $60,000 and expanded in [[1889]].


The school was named in honor of South Carolina-born poet [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Hamilton_Hayne Paul Hamilton Hayne], who sent an original poem and a book of verse in honor of the school at its dedication.
The school was named in honor of South Carolina-born poet [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Hamilton_Hayne Paul Hamilton Hayne], who sent an original poem and a book of verse in honor of the school at its dedication.
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The original school was three stories with a basement and the upper floor sheltered under a mansard roof. The exterior was clad in light-colored brick with limestone quoins at the corners and segmental arches over the windows. A central entrance tower faced 5th Avenue and was peaked with a tall pyramidal roof spire. The other roofs were of slate with clipped gables and a wrought-iron parapet rail.
The original school was three stories with a basement and the upper floor sheltered under a mansard roof. The exterior was clad in light-colored brick with limestone quoins at the corners and segmental arches over the windows. A central entrance tower faced 5th Avenue and was peaked with a tall pyramidal roof spire. The other roofs were of slate with clipped gables and a wrought-iron parapet rail.


An [[1889]] addition to the south side of the building faced 20th Street. It housed 12 classrooms on three stories, with an attic floor enclosed in a multi-gabled roof. The newer building, designed by the firm of [[Wheelock, Joy and Wheelock]] and built at a cost of $50,000, was clad in a darker brick and had a more understated ornamental scheme with triple windows and projecting courses.
An [[1889]] addition to the south side of the building faced 20th Street. It housed 12 classrooms on three stories, with an attic floor enclosed in a multi-gabled roof. The newer building, designed by the firm of [[Wheelock, Joy & Wheelock]] and built at a cost of $50,000, was clad in a darker brick and had a more understated ornamental scheme with triple windows and projecting courses.


[[Image:Paul Hayne School.jpg|right|thumb|225px|Illustration of the Paul Hayne School in an 1893 publication]]
[[Image:1930 Paul Hayne school linotypist.png|right|thumb|225px|Instruction on a linotype machine in 1930. {{BPL permission caption|http://bplonline.cdmhost.com/u?/p4017coll8,3455}}]]
In September [[1930]] the school was converted from a high school into an "opportunity school", providing vocational instruction to high-school age students with specialized classes in printing, architectural drawing, mechanical drawing, radio, machine shop, pattern making, painting and decorating, commercial art, auto mechanics, electrical work, salesmanship, tea room and cafeteria management and sewing. The student's days were split between practical instruction and academic work related to the trades (shop mathematics, shop science, business English, etc).
In September [[1930]] the school was converted from a high school into an "opportunity school", providing vocational instruction to high-school age students with specialized classes in printing, architectural drawing, mechanical drawing, radio, machine shop, pattern making, painting and decorating, commercial art, auto mechanics, electrical work, salesmanship, tea room and cafeteria management and sewing. The student's days were split between practical instruction and academic work related to the trades (shop mathematics, shop science, business English, etc).


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* [[T. C. Young]], 1926-1930
* [[T. C. Young]], 1926-1930
* [[R. F. Jarvis]], 1930-
* [[R. F. Jarvis]], 1930-
==Gallery==
<gallery>
Image:Paul Hayne School.jpg|Illustration of the Paul Hayne School in an 1893 publication
Image:1930 Paul Hayne school linotypist.png|Instruction on a linotype machine in 1930
</gallery>


==References==
==References==
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[[Category:5th Avenue South]]
[[Category:5th Avenue South]]
[[Category:20th Street South]]
[[Category:20th Street South]]
[[Category:Block 173]]
[[Category:1886 buildings]]
[[Category:1886 buildings]]
[[Category:1889 buildings]]
[[Category:1889 buildings]]
[[Category:Wheelock & Wheelock buildings]]
[[Category:Wheelock & Wheelock buildings]]

Revision as of 11:45, 18 March 2020

Paul Hayne School
Paul Hayne High School.jpg
Active 1886–1940s
School type Public
District Birmingham City Schools
Grades 1-12
Colors
Mascot
Location 2000 5th Avenue South, (map)
Birmingham

The Paul Hayne School or Paul Hayne Opportunity High School (originally Southside Grammar School) was a former Birmingham city school located on the northwest corner of Block 173, which is the southeast corner of the intersection of 5th Avenue South and 20th Street,on the present site of the Kirklin Clinic. It was constructed in 1885 at a cost of $60,000 and expanded in 1889.

The school was named in honor of South Carolina-born poet Paul Hamilton Hayne, who sent an original poem and a book of verse in honor of the school at its dedication.

The original school was three stories with a basement and the upper floor sheltered under a mansard roof. The exterior was clad in light-colored brick with limestone quoins at the corners and segmental arches over the windows. A central entrance tower faced 5th Avenue and was peaked with a tall pyramidal roof spire. The other roofs were of slate with clipped gables and a wrought-iron parapet rail.

An 1889 addition to the south side of the building faced 20th Street. It housed 12 classrooms on three stories, with an attic floor enclosed in a multi-gabled roof. The newer building, designed by the firm of Wheelock, Joy & Wheelock and built at a cost of $50,000, was clad in a darker brick and had a more understated ornamental scheme with triple windows and projecting courses.

In September 1930 the school was converted from a high school into an "opportunity school", providing vocational instruction to high-school age students with specialized classes in printing, architectural drawing, mechanical drawing, radio, machine shop, pattern making, painting and decorating, commercial art, auto mechanics, electrical work, salesmanship, tea room and cafeteria management and sewing. The student's days were split between practical instruction and academic work related to the trades (shop mathematics, shop science, business English, etc).

By 1953, the school was no longer in use, allowing students displaced by a fire at Edgewood Elementary School to be bused there while the damaged portion of their school was rebuilt.

Principals

Gallery

References