Baldwin Building

Baldwin Building

The Baldwin Building was a classroom and office structure located near the southeastern corner of the main quadrangle between the Administration and Farrington buildings. Also known as the Education Building or the Training/Demonstration School, it was Sam Houston Normal Institute's seventh permanent building.

The 20,607 square-foot building was constructed at a cost of $80,000 and contained, "a gymnasium, shops for manual arts, and domestic science laboratories in addition to the usual classrooms [2]." Certain classrooms were of a larger-than-normal size to allow SHNI students to sit behind the children's desks and observe the lesson from different points of view.

This wasn't the first building to be used for the preparation of teachers. An embryonic "model school" was mentioned in the 1880-81 catalog and was housed somewhere in the vicinity of the campus; it was gone by 1882 [2]. In 1912 SHNI opened a first grade school on the campus; two years later, this was expanded to nine grades taught by five teachers in what was referred to as the "Training School Building"- essentially just a quickly overcrowding Austin College Building. Soon thereafter it became necessary to create a separate structure.

In 1937 the demonstration school and city school of Huntsville combined and the building became the city junior high school. This merging was encouraged by the trend that "student teaching should be done in a realistic situation - that is, under conditions which prevail in the public schools in which students would later teach [2]." After larger public school buildings were constructed elsewhere in Huntsville, this building reverted back to full-use by the college.

The Education Building was architecturally reminiscent of the Administration Building and Women's Gym: similarly box-shaped to the former and built of cream-colored bricks like the latter. It also seems to have been known by numerous names over its six decades: the Education Building; the PPC, for the Psychology, Philosophy, and Counseling courses later offered; and later still to honor Joseph Baldwin [1]. Whatever name it went by didn't matter: in 1983 it was demolished due to age and foundation concerns. A new general purpose classroom building was conceived for the site, but an outdoor park area, later known as the Farrington Pit, was built on the site instead.

Education classes are now found in the Teacher Education Center, built in 1976 on the eastern edge of campus.

At some point during the early 1990s the cornerstone wound up in downtown Huntsville at the southwest corner of Eleventh Street and Sam Houston Avenue. The rescued cornerstones of both the Education Building and Women's Gym are featured as part of the Sculptural Wall outdoor project designed by visual artist Richard Haas.

About

Location

  • Avenue J
  • Building ID#: 00006

Namesake

Architect

  • Endress & Watkin

Contractor

  • Unknown

Timeline

  • 1918:
    • Constructed
  • 1937:
    • Used as Huntsville Jr. High School
  • c.1982:
    • Renamed for Baldwin [1]
  • Jul. 1983:
    • Demolished

Resources

Sources

  • [1] SHSU: 2000, Campus Master Plan (1982).
  • [2] Vision Realized (pages 53, 55, 84); (Mary S. Estill, 1970).