| Formerly: |
Duluth
Central High School |
| Built: |
1891-1892
|
| Designed
by: |
Emmett S. Palmer, and Lucian P. Hall |
| Cost: |
US$460,000.00
|
|
Maximum height: |
230
feet |
| Maximum width: |
284
feet |
| Type: |
Educational institution |
| Type: |
Clock Tower |
| Location: |
215
North First Avenue East
|
Looking
more like a church than a school, the old Duluth Central
High School leans on the hill that slopes down to
the harbor below. It's most notable feature is the
230-foot-tall clock tower. Its focal point being the
clock which was imported from Paris. Though the clock
was built in France, its chimes are patterned after
Big Ben in London. But how did that massive structure
come to rest so high up the hill? You can thank horse-pulled
elevators which lifted the sandstone up the hill from
the harbor. The old Central High School is built on
the site of the former Washington School, erected
in 1886. Its usefulness as a school expired in 1971
and is now the seat of administration for the Duluth
school district.
- The
school once had a six-ton 17-foot-long cannon, a
relic from the Spanish-American war. It was melted
down during the second World War.
- The
cornerstone contains a time capsule with newspaper
clippings from 1891.
- The
school had its own creamery and greenhouse. The
creamery sold its goods to local grocery stores.
The greenhouse was torn down to make room for bus
parking.
-
The gargoyles and other details are the work of
George Tharna.
- The
school is made of locally mined brownstone.
- On
winter days, the school would burn up to eight tons
of coal in its boilers.
- The
clock faces have a diameter of 10'6".
|
|
 |
|
"Almighty
God,
Almighty power,
Cherish our school,
Throughout the hour."
-Clock
tower motto written by student John F. Zorbas
|
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