McGuffey Hall


McGuffey Hall is a building at Miami University

History

McGuffey hall is home to Miami University's School of Education, Health and Society. The hall was named after William Holmes McGuffey, father of the McGuffey Readers. McGuffey Hall houses the School of Education, the name of the school was changed to McGuffey Schools," in honor of the man who organized the first teachers' training class in Ohio. The McGuffey Schools were located in the south section, and the building still was referred to as the South Pavilion of the Normal College Building.
Until construction of the Central Pavilion in 1916, the South and North Pavilions were separate buildings. The North and Central Pavilions provided accommodations for work of the Teacher's College. In 1916-17 the entire Normal College Building was renamed "McGuffey Hall."

William Holmes McGuffey

William McGuffey was a Miami professor of Latin, Greek, and Hebrew from 1826–32, a professor of mental philosophy, philology, and general criticism at Miami from 1832–36, and author of the famed McGuffey Eclectic Readers, which were widely used in schools throughout the nation during the last half of the 19th century. McGuffey received is A.B. degree from Washington College in Pennsylvania in 1826 and his D.D. degree from Washington College in 1842.
- McGuffey was a faculty member of Miami.
– He was president of Cincinnati College.
– He was president of Ohio University.
– He taught at Woodward College

Construction

The present McGuffey Hall structure was built in three different sections. The original building was constructed in 1909. Later additions and sections were erected years later. The use for the building was set to be the School of Education and Elementary Laboratory School. The total cost of the building was $364,000 with those funds coming from the state. The total square footage of the school is approximately 107,000 and the cubic footage approximately 1,290,000. In 1924-25 the south wing was extended eastward and a gymnasium occupied the upper two floors. Included in the building are an auditorium which seats 300, a gymnasium, a cafeteria, a library, which contains the Alstetter Collection of Children's Books which is considered to be one of the best collections of children's books in America.

Wings

Southwest wing was built in 1909, costing approximately $45,000 at the size of 25,109 square ft
Northwest wing was added on in 1915, costing approximately $89,000 at the size of 29,612 square ft
Central section was built in 1916, costing approximately $54,000 at the size of 13,400 square ft
Southeast wing was built in 1925 at a cost of $165,000 and years later in 1939 extensive alteration and fireproofing was done to the southwest wing. Also in 1966 the North half was remodeled and in 1971, the south half was remodeled.

The Site

The building is located on a slightly rolling area of ground in conjunction with and a part of the total university campus. The nature of the terrain is conducive to good drainage. The present site is bounded on the south by Spring Street and on the west by Campus. On the Northeast the a service drive originating on Campus Street and terminating at Spring Street encircles the building forming a natural driving line from the adjacent campus areas.

Building Structure

The building has been constructed in three units. It is a modified "U" shaped continuous unit with a gable, tiled roof, three floors, and a ground level floor. A sub-basement contains crawl space, pipes, ventilating and heating equipment. The structure is brick and mortar and fully fire-resistant in the 1914 and 1924 sections.

Cafeteria

The cafeteria was built in 1922 and involved the excavation of additional room under the south pavilion of the building. The additional room, after joined to the existing basement, had a total floor area of 12,000 square feet, sufficient room to accommodate 150-160 children during the noon hour.

EHS

Miami's School of Education, Health and Society was founded in 1902 as the first professional school of Miami University and one of the first teacher education schools in Ohio. It was originally called the Ohio State Normal School. The Ohio legislature authorized its establishment "to provide proper theoretical and practical training for all students desiring to prepare themselves for the work of teaching.