please email us your old Orange School
Schools and students:
Education
in
Orange
over
the years...
The
First
District
School,
now
the
base
of
residential
dwelling,
still
stands
today
at
the
corner
of
Old
Tavern
and
Orange
Center
Rds.
Orange's
first
three
schools
were
established
in
1806,
even
before
the
town
itself
was
created
and
by
1873
there
were
five
districts.
The
map
from
the
1868
Beers
Atlas
of
New
Haven
County
[click
here]
shows
the
four
existing
school
districts
at
the
time.
Can
you
find
all
the
schoolhouse locations?
Second
District
School.
The
Elbert
Scobie
post
card
is
entitled
School
Under
the
Hill
and
pictures
it
ca.
1900
at
what
is
now
the
intersection
of
Ridge
Rd.
and
Old
Grassy
Hill
Rd.
When
the
Orange
School
was
built
in
1909,
the
district
schools
were
sold.
This
one
was
moved
to
a
nearby
lot
and
now
serves
as
the
second
story
of
a
residential
home,
as
seen
at
right.
School
children
are
pictured
at
middle
ca.
1900.
The
Third
District
School
is
now
a
residence
in
its
original
location
at
Racebrook
Rd.
and
Woodside
Drive.
It
was
once
used
as
a
cottage
and
summer
home
by
Clarence
Russell.
A
front
porch
and
rear
portion
have been added.
Fourth
District
School.
The
snippet
from
the
Beers
atlas
shows
that
it
was
at
the
northeast
corner
of
Clark
Lane
and
Grassy
Hill
Rd.
The
schoolhouse
burned
after
the
districts
were
consolidated
in
1909
and
no
photos
have
been
identified.
The
Fifth
District
School
was
completed
in
1874.
Samuel
Halliwell
and
Philander
Ferry,
proprietors
of
Tyler
City
which
they
promoted
with
the
coming
of
the
New
Haven
&
Derby
RR,
donated
building
lots
so
that
'city'
residents
would
have
a
place
to
educate
their
children.
The
building
was
used
as
a
succession
of
churches
after
the
school
districts
were
consolidated
in
1909.
The
structure
is
pictured
at
left
in
1945
as
the
Chapel
of
the
Good
Shepherd,
an
Episcopal
missionary
outpost
of
Christ
Church,
West
Haven,
and
at
right
is
seen
today
as
Our
Lady
of Sorrows at 378 Spring St.
The
Academy
building,
now
a
museum
and
research
center,
was
constructed
in
1878
as
a
meeting
house
and
a
high
school.
In
1967
it
became
the
headquarters
of
the
board
of
education,
as
seen
in
the
photo
at
lower
left.
Classroom
scenes
date
to
the
early
1900s.
Photo
at
right
shows
Mary
Rebecca
Woodruff
seated
in
the
bottom
row,
second
from
the
left.
Later
to
write
the
town's
only
full
history
in
1949,
she
is
pictured
with
classmates
at
her
graduation, ca. 1894, in front of The Academy.
Orange
School
was
established
in
1909,
consolidating
the
five
district
schools.
This
building
contained
four
classrooms,
two
grades
in
each
room.
Both
views
are
from
Orange
Center
Rd.,
the
one
on
the
right
another
of
Elbert
Scobie's
postcards.
Orange Historical Society
Orange, Connecticut