Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Multi-Purpose Schools


Accession Number P75-54-0249g, Hughes Company Glass Negatives Collection,
Courtesy of the Photography Collections, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Public schools in poor and working class areas of the city performed multiple functions in the lives of the students.  As historical geographer Sherry Olson points out, these schools were designed with "the strategy of processing the great unwashed and Americanizing the foreign-born worker." (Baltimore, 306)


Accession Number P75-54-1513g, Hughes Company Glass Negatives Collection,
Courtesy of the Photography Collections, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
The boys in the image above were photographed by the Hughes Company on July 12, 1922 in showers at School #108, located on Caroline Street near Bank Street in Southeast Baltimore.  An excerpt from the Strayer Report describes #108 in the following way:
The playground is totally inadequate for the children housed in this building, since only 7.6 square   feet are available per child. The complete lack of corridors, the unsatisfactory nature of the fire-escapes and the poor toilet provisions are such as to require that this building be given immediate attention. There are structural faults in this building which should be remedied at once if this building is to remain in use. (Strayer, 182)

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