Claymont Stone School Explained

Naaman's Creek School
Location:3611 Philadelphia Pike,
Claymont, Delaware
Coordinates:39.8048°N -75.4547°W
Architect:William S. Bird
Architecture:Early Republic, One-room school
Added:November 15, 1990
Refnum:90001715

The Claymont Stone School, also known as Naaman's Creek School #1, is a historic schoolhouse built in 1805, on land donated by Founding Father John Dickinson, in Claymont, Delaware, on the Philadelphia Pike just south of the Darley House. The school was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1990. Its official Delaware State Historic Marker indicates that the school "may have been the first racially integrated public school in the State."[1]

The original building was renovated in 1905 and expanded to become a two-room schoolhouse, serving the neighborhood of Claymont and the rural Naaman's Creek area as a school until the 1924–25 school year, when the Green Street School was built.[2]

In 1928 the Stone School was converted to serve as a community center and public library, but in 1988 it was deemed structurally unsound. Thereafter, it stood empty, and the school district considered tearing it down until a group called Friends of the Claymont Stone School intervened to save the building, raising funds for its renovation and conversion into a museum and heritage center, which was completed in 2002.

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://archives.delaware.gov/markers/ncc/CLAYMONT%20STONE%20SCHOOL%20NC-105.shtml Delaware Public Archives
  2. Web site: [{{NRHP url|id=90001715}} National Register of Historic Places Inventory/Nomination: Naaman's Creek School]. Valerie Cesna and Anne C. Wilson . September 1989 . National Park Service. and