Friday, September 14, 2012

Happy Birthday Arsenal Tech High School!


Arsenal Technical High School celebrated an impressive milestone this week when it turned 100 years old on September 11th. Of course the original military structures are much older than that, and some, such as the Pierre & Wright designed Milo H. Stuart Memorial building (seen above in the article Tech Honors Its Founder) built in 1938, are more recent. The Drawings + Documents Archive contains an extensive range of items related to the high school campus and will be posting a series of images from various collections in honor of this historic campus.

For this week, you see a small poster printed for its 20th anniversary in 1932. This comes from our Fran E. Schroeder Collection, an architect who worked for Pierre & Wright before starting his own firm in Indianapolis. Given the extent of material related to Arsenal Tech within his collection, it's likely he worked on the 1938 Milo H. Stuart Memorial building. The Pierre & Wright building is depicted in an Indianapolis Star article about its dedication, which took place May 22, 1940, a date chosen to honor the day known as "Supreme day by the faculty and the student body because of a Supreme Court decision which gave the campus of 76 acres to the school city of Indianapolis." As seen in the third image, an interior mural within the building "memorializes the life and service of Milo H. Stuart, one of Indiana's stalwart educators and inspired administrators."

Images: Arsenal Technical High School clippings and photographs, Fran E. Schroeder Architectural Records, Drawings + Documents Archive, Archives and Special Collections, Ball State University Libraries.

2 comments:

  1. According to the 1955 Arsenal Cannon Yearbook, Fran Schroeder, Tech Class of 1926, designed Stuart Hall.
    https://www.facebook.com/#!/photo.php?fbid=2057834690033&set=o.107773869783&type=3&theater

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  2. Thanks for posting, Kevin! Yes, Fran Schroeder was a talented architect and may very well have been the lead designer on the project when he worked for the Pierre & Wright firm that was hired to build the Stuart Memorial Building. His name appears on some, but not all, of the architectural drawings.

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