This postcard proudly features the new Menasha High School at Seventh and Racine Streets.
Designed by
the Green Bay firm of Foeller, Schober & Berners, the Menasha High &
Vocational School was built between 1936 and 1938. Plans for the construction
of a new high school were underway prior to the March 1936 fire that destroyed
the existing high school building. Indeed, in July 1935, an application, complete
with sketches, was filed with the Public Works Administration (PWA) for a grant
amounting to $270,000 for what was anticipated to be a $600,000 building.
Fourteen months following the submittal, and exactly six months after the fire,
the Board of Education received in September a letter approving the funding.
The Maurice Schumacher Company of Minneapolis was the low bidder and
construction began on December 1, 1936. Approximately six weeks later, a labor
strike occurred, which was settled on February 4, 1937. Because school
equipment was lost in the 1936 fire, an additional $38,000 in funding was
requested from the PWA. The final inspection of the four-unit complex occurred
on February 19, 1938. An open house, which was reportedly attended by over
14,000 persons, was held between March 25-27. Actual dedication of the building
occurred on Commencement Day, June 2, 1938.
The school exhibited a style known as Colonial Revivalism, incorporating Georgian detail with a neoclassical auditorium.
source: HISTORICAL
& ARCHITECTURAL RESOURCES SURVEY, Aug 31, 2009 Prepared for: Menasha
Landmarks Commission by: HERITAGE
RESEARCH, LTD. Menomonee Falls, Wisconsin 53051
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