A colorized
picture of Coolspring School in 1938.
Click
on all images on this page to get the full size image.
His School Design
Coolspring
School in Indiana was designed by John Lloyd Wright (the inventor of Lincoln
Logs and son of famous architect Frank Lloyd Wright). Ground was broken for
Coolspring School in 1937 as a township school, housing grades K-8. The
original school consisted of eight classrooms and a gymnasium/stage
area, plus an office.
The
building was unusual in its day. Tall windows were filled with block
glass. The building stood in stark contrast to the fields which
surrounded it.
In
1954-55, due to increasing enrollments, the current classrooms facing
County Road 300 North were added along with a new office complex.
Unfortunately, the block glass was filled in at the bottom and windows
were put at the top. The block glass window by the entrance was filled
in and an extra door was added. As you can see in the picture above,
the flag, red and beige brick were the only things that remained the
same.
The only part of the old building that is still standing
encases the art room and cafeteria. Drop ceilings block the expansive
ceiling above. If there is
anyone who wishes to see the last remaining structure of John Lloyd
Wright's design, climb up a ladder and pop up a ceiling tile in the art
room. A flashlight will illuminate the old ceiling structure. On the right you
see the back of the 1955 version of the school.
A few years after the facade change and classroom additions, Coolspring
School was annexed into the Michigan City Area Schools system. The
school continued to grow and in 1985, Coolspring Elementary had a major
face lift. Ground broke in 1983 and some of the old part of the school
was torn down. Classrooms were added behind the classrooms that lined
300 North.