AKRON’S OLD STONE SCHOOL
Also Known As Schoolhouse No. 2
By Michael C. Cohill, 2006
According to Pearl A. Drews in her report, The
Restoration of the Old Stone School, Akron Public
Schools, 1967, “Samuel Lane’s drawing (from memory) of
the frame school on the northeast corner of Broadway and
Middlebury Street (now East Buchtel Ave) this building was
replaced by what we now call “The Old Stone School” in
approximately 1840. (Evidence seeming to prove 1842 as the
building date has been found to be invalid. Unless other
evidence can be found, the generally accepted date, 1840,
will continue to be used.)”
Mrs. Drews was head of the social studies department at
Akron Public Schools in 1967 when the Old Stone School
was restored. Recent research has discovered many
interesting things about the Old Stone School including
different building dates.
The First Schoolhouse No.2 & the District School System
- The schoolhouse at the corner of Broadway and Buchtel
was called School House No. 2. That name appears on its
original property deed and numerous other documents.
- School House No. 1 was located in the Town Square,
what we know today as ‘Perkins Square’ by Children’s
Hospital. It was not unusual to locate a schoolhouse on
property that already belonged in the public domain.
- The property for Schoolhouse No. 2 was donated by
General Simon Perkins and his wife Nancy for a school.
- Samuel A. Lane, writing in his book, 50 Years and
Over, says the original schoolhouse was built in 1834
and he made a drawing of the original clapboard
schoolhouse.
- The earliest Annual Report for Portage Township School
District No. 2 was an enumeration of students in 1834,
which supports Lane’s date.
- Annual Reports from Portage Township School Districts
No. 1 and No. 4 were filed in 1833, suggesting there must
have been a Portage Township School Districts No. 2
previous to 1834.
- There were seven schoolhouses in Portage Township
between 1832 and 1838.
- In 1830 the Ohio General Assembly passed O.L. XXVIII –
an amendment to the school law concerning certain
restrictions on the amount of tax levied for school
buildings; “not more than fifty dollars might be levied in
any one school year for building purposes unless one-third
of the property in the district was owned by residents.”
Further, if 1/3 to 1/2 of the property were owned by
residents the tax levied could be $100 and if 1/3 to 2/3
the tax could be $200. This inimical school law for
building schoolhouses was replaced by Senator Leicester
King’s 1838 school law.
- As Gen. Simon Perkins, a non-resident, owned more
than 66% of the property in the Village of Akron and
Leicester King, also a non-resident, owned at least 10%
of the remainder; the total amount available from
taxation to build Schoolhouse No.2 was limited to $50.
- A tax of $50 was not enough to pay for a clapboard
schoolhouse. Sawed lumber during that period was
prohibitively expensive. During this period almost all
schoolhouses in Ohio were made from logs.
- It’s reasonable to assume that private donations
were made, in addition to the $50 tax, to build a fine
clapboard schoolhouse.
- It’s equally obvious the school directors of
Schoolhouse No.2 could never afford to build a
schoolhouse out of stone before 1838.
- Due to a severe economic depression, called the
Panic of 1837, money became so scarce in Akron between
1839 and 1843 that most goods were obtained through
barter and few taxes were paid. There are no records
indicating that tax supported schools were held in Akron
during this time period.
- Until July, 1847, each schoolhouse was its own school
district, had its own elected school directors and
officers, its own tax base and elections were held every
year to determine if school would be taught that year, and
if so, the amount to be taxed to support the school. Even
though these schools were supported by taxes this was not
enough to cover all expenses so tuition was charged,
usually $2 to $4 per student. This amount was high enough
to keep most families from sending their children to
school. Some schools also required the parents of students
to supply firewood and to feed and board the teacher.
The Second Schoolhouse No. 2 & the Common School System
- With the passage of the Akron School Law of 1847, for
the first time all resident children of Akron could go to
school for free. The first day of school under the new law
was July 5, 1847. The Akron School Laws of 1847-1849
defined what is generally understood today as public
school governance in the USA.
- From the passage of The Akron School Law of 1847 to
the end of the Civil War the Akron Board of Education
could not obtain financing from the Bank of Akron for new
schoolhouses guaranteed by their tax base, so all
construction projects had to come out of a yearly two mill
building tax which amounted to as little as $256. This was
not enough money to build a schoolhouse out of stone.
- When Col. George T. Perkins returned from the Civil
War he went to work at a newly formed Bank of Akron. In
later years he was elected to and served with distinction
on the Akron Board of Education.
- The 1868 Annual Report from the Akron Board of
Education to the Town Council of Akron (this report covers
a period from 1866 to 1868) lists the construction costs
of Schoolhouse # 2 at $537.26. This is when they tore down
the old clapboard schoolhouse and built a new schoolhouse
out of stone. That year eight new primary schools were
opened – Akron’s first schoolhouse building boom – due to
the availability of bank loans.
- By the 1880s, the small size of Schoolhouse No. 2 made
it difficult for education purposes during a period of
rapid population growth and so the Akron Board of
Education sold the property to the railroad for use as a
maintenance office.
The Old Stone School in the 20th Century
- In 1925, the year of Akron’s Centennial, the Akron
City Council voted to buy the property from the railroad
to save it from being demolished. They donated it to The
Summit County Historical Society.
- In 1967 the Akron Public Schools leased the property
from the Summit County Historical Society for one dollar.
They renovated the schoolhouse so 3rd graders
studying local history could visit on field trips.
- As part of the renovation the building was extended to
the east, indoor plumbing was added and for the first time
the students at Schoolhouse No. 2 don’t have to go outside
to use an outhouse.