The following summary was written by
Inez Owen for the presentation of the Founders Day program
of the Oak Hill-Park Knoll PTA meeting, February 17, 1954.
It provides some good detail on the origins of Park’s school
system.
The Independent School District of St. Louis Park was
organized in 1888 - in that year there were 51 pupils. Early
records dating back to shortly before the turn of the
century refer to four schools: Lincoln, North Side, Oak Hill
and Manhattan Park.
The Lincoln School is our present Village Hall. This
building was leased with option to buy. The first high
school was held at the Lincoln School. In 1902 St. Louis
Park residents voted approval of a $12,000 bond to finance
an addition to the Lincoln building for a high school
although a 4 year course of high school study had been
adopted in 1899. With new increased space, it was possible
to add a course in sewing and manual training.
The North Side School is the present
Eliot School. The
original North Side School was given to the neighborhood for
use as a barn when a new one was built.
The original Oak Hill School was a two room building (6
grades, 2 teachers) located near the corner of our present
North St. and Pennsylvania Avenue. An addition was later
built to this, and in 1906 the present site was purchased.
The section known as Manhattan Park was a section near
France Avenue where Minneapolis and St. Louis Park meet.
These people had a transportation problem, and when the
streetcar company refused a petition for free rides to
school for the kids, the people of this section offered to
erect a building 16' x 22' x 12' high if the School Board
would furnish fuel, furniture and a teacher. This offer was
accepted but what happened to that school is not clear from
records available to us.
In addition to these schools, rooms were leased in the
Congregational Church. An effort was made to rent rooms in
the Presbyterian Church on Oak Hill for use by Oak Hill
primary children, but the church refused to rent for less
than $10.00 a month, which was considered too much money. In
1908 a one room school was built on Lake Street - the
beginning of our present Fern Hill School and in 1912 T. B.
Walker donated land for a new high school building.
It is apparent that St. Louis Park residents have always
been concerned with the quality of their schools end the
welfare of the kids. Wedged between votes of approval for
payment of cords of wood and sawing of same, we find the old
School Board members concerned with remodeling buildings,
building new schools and additions to the old schools,
indicating that our present crowded conditions may not be
something new in the Park. In 1897 it was decided that
children must be 6 years old before starting school.
Eliminating 5 year olds was a means of easing crowded
classrooms. However, a truant officer made sure that
eligible pupils did attend school.
Teachers, then as now, were picked with care, and when
classes were extra large, teachers were often hired as
assistants with the stipulation that their services could be
dispensed with when not needed. It is interesting to note
that Miss Baston was originally hired as an assistant.
Regular teachers were required to board and room in the
Park.
In 1894 vaccination of all school children was made
compulsory, and as early as 1896 the School Board started
studying ways to transport children to school. The beginning
of our present vast bus system was very simple - a man
received $20.00 a month to take children to school during
the coldest winter months. My guess is that he used horses
and a sleigh!
This information comes from a variety of sources: newspapers, books, yearbooks, phone directories, interviews, etc. Given the varied sources, we cannot guarantee that all of this information is correct, and welcome any additions and corrections. Please contact us with your contributions and comments.