

Brown Street to Groppi High: A look at vintage school buildings
Like me, it seems that quite a few other folks are curious about and fascinated by old school buildings. The response to my blogs about the Henry Koch-designed Garfield Avenue School and Kagel Elementary were well-received and got me a number of e-mails and in-person comments.
One teacher, for example, told me that Longfellow School and Trowbridge (or Dover, I can't remember now) were the oldest extant public school buildings. I'm sorry to tell this teacher that her school and the other she mentioned are not holders of that title.
While I don't have definitive information, even a little digging has shown that Longfellow dates to 1886, Dover to 1890 and Trowbridge to 1894. That puts the first two right in the heart of the buildings built during the tenure of superintendent William Anderson – who was top man at MPS from 1883 until 1892.
Trowbridge is a little fuzzier. While MPS' own history, "Our Roots Grow Deep," says that Trowbridge was built during the Anderson years, an Energy Star document that lists the construction dates of a number of district buildings gives the 1894 date. That, of course, could not be accurate if the building was indeed built during Anderson's time.
Regardless, that means it is not the oldest.
The oldest I've been able to find is Brown Street Academy, 2029 N. 20th St., constructed in 1882.
Brown Street was opened as Ninth District Primary and became District 9-2 in 1903 (when Siefert, 1547 N. 14th St., opened) and became Brown Street in 1912, when many schools were renamed, often after their locations. The street – and therefore the school – are named in honor of west side Milwaukee pioneer Deacon Samuel Brown.
The original building was already quite large and it was later expanded to the north. View it from the south elevation (Brown Street) and you really get a sense for its orderly mass. Then compare it to nearby Siefert or a school like Maryland Avenue or Golda Meir and you can appreciate how spacious it must be in relation to other buildings of the era.
Like the Maryland building, Brown Street has a semi-circular space. However, while the Maryland example spans two floors, the Brown Street half moon is only one story and appears to house a single room. Perhaps it is an addition.
The building lacks the adornment of the Henry Koch buildings discussed in previous blogs and looks more solid, like a weightier community structure.
Siefert, named for MPS superintendent Henry O.R. Siefert (1896-1904) and built on a U-shaped plan, is similarly unadorned, though its central section boasts a lovely row of seven large arched windows on the third floor, giving it a Romanesque feel.
According to the Siefert Web site, that school opened in 1903, as Ninth District #1, a K-8 school, noting that the, "student body was composed primarily of students from blue-collar German families. Pancratius Tiefenthaler (there is a Tiefenthaler Park nearby on Cherry Street) was the first administrator, and he served in this capacity for three years."
I'm not sure if it was old Pancratius or one of his 10 successors (including Siefert himself, who was principal of the school from 1906 to 1922) who was responsible, but I'd love to know why every one of the dozens of windows in the western elevation has been bricked up.
Like Brown, Siefert has a much later addition, too. But while Brown's is harmonious, Siefert's is a single-story utilitarian shoe-box of an add-on. (Though, it should be added, Brown Street also has two other additions that are no treat for eyes, either.)
Also in the neighborhood is the former McKinley School, 2001 W. Vliet St., which is now home to the V.E. Carter Human Resources Center. Although I haven't been able to find a date of construction for this gigantic building, I have been able to ascertain that it was built between 1883 and 1892.
The sprawling now-painted brick building – which appears from the outside to be in need of some serious maintenance – was opened as Fifteenth District No. 1 and was renamed Cold Spring Avenue in 1912. In 1927 it was named for the 25th president, William B. McKinley.
It's such a seemingly randomly arrayed amalgam of sections, that I wouldn't be surprised if it had been a much smaller building that was added onto a long time ago. The west wing, on 21st Street, for example, looks as if it could have been a self-contained building.
Viewed from above (thank you Google), it appears to be four attached buildings.
With all its nooks and crannies and wings and dormers, McKinley looks like it would be a spelunker's dream.
On the other end of the spectrum is the fetching Fifteenth District No. 2, a few blocks away at 1312 N. 27th St.
This wonderful building is in beautiful shape and is a stunner. I don't have a date for this one, either, but I have a speculative guess that it was designed by Gerrit DeGelleke, who was architect for the school board from 1905 to 1918 and did work during other periods, too (including Juneau High School in 1931), with his firm Van Ryn & DeGelleke.
While the building would fit in alongside Eschweiler's buildings on the UWM campus that were built at the turn of the century – like Johnson and Holton Halls, for example – look at neighboring Sabin Hall on the UWM campus to see the kind of work Van Ryn & DeGelleke were doing in the 1920s.
The only problem with my hypothesis is that MPS says the school was built in 1893 and I'm not sure if Van Ryn & DeGelleke worked that early with the district.
There is an addition on the south side that appears to have been added, perhaps in the 1960s, but I'm not going to let that ruin my view of this building (even if it does ruin the view of the building from the south).
In recent years, the building housed the Urban Waldorf School before reverting to 27th Street School and finally closing a few years ago. When its doors fly open again next year to house the two merged Kilmer schools (one was located on the South Side, the other in the lower level of French Immersion), it will be renamed James Groppi High School.
Talkbacks
Joanne2011 | May 12, 2011 at 9:29 a.m. (report)
The survey of the historic school buildings in Milwaukee was very interesting, but you have to visit each one to get the feel of the thousands of children, parents and educators who have walked those wooden floors.
Bobby, take a day or two to go inside those buildings and get the feel of "real" Milwaukee.
I was inside every one many times, and although some need major repair, they still bring back strong memories of going to school in this city.
And, yes... Brown Street is the oldest building in MPS.
| Rate this: |
![]() |
1 comment about this article. Post your comment/review now |
Facebook comments
Disclaimer: Please note that Facebook comments are posted through Facebook and cannot be approved, edited or declined by OnMilwaukee.com. The opinions expressed in Facebook comments do not necessarily reflect those of OnMilwaukee.com or its staff.
Recent Articles & Blogs by Bobby Tanzilo
Pabst's enduring pavilion faces extinction
Published May 20, 2013
Thanks to Erik Larson's 2003 bestseller, "The Devil in the White City," yet another generation is fascinated by the 1893 Chicago World's Fair: Columbian Exposition. Despite its enduring - in itself somewhat surprising - popularity, little remains of this by all accounts stunning little temporary city. One survivor serves as the entrance and gift shop to The Pabst Mansion, 2000 W. Wisconsin Ave., and it is in increasingly desperate condition.
The coolest record of the '60s folk revival was made in Milwaukee
Published May 20, 2013
As part of "The Avant Garde Coffee House Project" exhibit currently on view, there's a glass-topped case with some posters and a record. It's a pretty nondescript thing, frankly, with a black and white photo and some not especially artful text. But that little record - "Blues, Rags and Hollers," by folk blues trio Koerner, Ray & Glover - made a big bang when it was released in June 1963. And it was made in Milwaukee.
Former Color Truth frontman Steinbach finds the road back
Published May 19, 2013
It's been a long time since we've heard from Zach Steinbach. Nearly five years ago Steinbach fronted The Color Truth, a Milwaukee band that seemed poised to take the next step with its big, melodic, poppy rock and roll. The band fizzled out a couple years back, leaving Steinbach a bit lost. But now, he's back. He's got a band, and he's got a new solo record. More, than anything, he says, he's got a new lease on a musical life.
Let's put the "front" back in Front Street
Published May 16, 2013
For a variety of reasons, I've been thinking about Front Street, which now seems so ironically named, fronting as it does onto nothing and serving as the ultimate definition of a Milwaukee "backstreet." In my mind, I see something much different that can be seen on the block today.
New Eric & Magill song debuts
Published May 15, 2013
Milwaukee's Eric & Magill, who released an EP called "Two Travelers" in February, will follow it up with a second full-length record this summer. Ryan Weber and Eric Osterman release "Night Singers" on July 23. You can hear the song, "Baggage and Clothes" now.
Brush up on your McCartney this week, Milwaukee
Published May 15, 2013
With a return by Paul McCartney on tap this summer at Miller Park, the arrival of "Rockshow," is well-timed. The film, which screens at the Bayshore iPic at 8 p.m. on Thursday, May 16, and at 2 p.m. on Sunday, May 19, was filmed on the same 1975-76 U.S. tour that led to Paul McCartney & Wings' triple-live album, "Wings Over America."
Enemy Star goes supernova
Published May 14, 2013
Local hard rock outfit Enemy Star has called it quits, according to guitarist and founder Paris Ortiz, who wrote in today to say the band will play two final gigs this weekend, including one at Club Anything with a special surprise guest.
Biden to Milwaukee student: People love chocolate
Published May 13, 2013
This morning, Jenny Aicher, a teacher at Downtown Montessori in Bay View, wrote to share some big news on campus. A student in her class received a handwritten note from Vice President Joe Biden.
Fish fry: Double Eagle Pub
Published May 13, 2013
"One of Milwaukee's best kept secrets ... if you can find the Double Eagle Pub, you will enjoy the Double Eagle Pub!"
Vinyl resurgence breathes life into record shop business
Published May 13, 2013
We asked Ken Chrisien at Acme and Dan DuChaine at Rushmor - both in Bay View - and Luke Lavin at Bull's Eye, on the East Side, about how the recession affected the business, about Record Store Day and more. Their answers might surprise you.
Like Us
Follow Us




















