Wrightstown Octagonal Schoolhouse - Wrightstown, PA, USA
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Lightnin Bug
N 40° 15.291 W 075° 00.383
18T E 499457 N 4456043
This Octagonal former schoolhouse is located at Swamp Road and Second Street Pike. It was established as a Quaker School in 1802 and is also on the US National Register of Historic Places
Waymark Code: WM1A4DC
Location: Pennsylvania, United States
Date Posted: 06/17/2024
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member NCDaywalker
Views: 0

The early settlers of Wrightstown were mainly Quaker, who believed strongly in the education of the children. Schools have existed here since c.1721. These early schools were organized by a Board of Trustees and parents paid a tuition for their children to attend. Often the Quaker Meeting would pay for those children whose parents were not able to afford the necessary fees.

In 1802 a group of residents banded together to lease this land (at what is now the corner of Swamp Road and Second Street Pike) for 99 years from Joseph Burson. They decided to build a stone structure in the octagonal shape which was considered very appropriate for classroom use. The eight-sided form allowed the maximum amount of light to enter at all times of the day. At the time, artificial light which was provided from oil lamps and candles provided meager light for young eyes, but these sources were all that were available. They also added greatly to the expense of operating the school. The eight-sided building usually had a door in one of the sides and a window in each of the other seven sides. As in this building, the windows were usually higher up on the wall. This brought in the light but did not provide distracting views as the children could not see out of the windows when seated on their benches. The windows were also not large, because the cost of window glass was prohibitive.

Heat in the winter was provided by a small stove in the center of the room (with a stovepipe at the peak of the roof), and the warmth would be distributed evenly throughout the interior space. The interior walls were usually whitewashed which gave a cleaner, lighter environment (again maximizing available lighting).

The octagonal, sometimes called "ink bottle," shape accounted for over 100 schools in the Delaware Valley of Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Delaware. Starting in 1773 with the 8-square building at Oxford Valley, Bucks County and ending in 1851 with the construction of the Harmony School, near Flemington, Hunterdon County, NJ, the buildings served a useful life, but most have succumbed to age and "progress." This Wrightstown Township School is the only remaining octagonal school in Bucks County. It functioned as a school from 1802 until 1850. At mid-century, local government entered the education field and Township School Districts were formed to build and maintain schools, hire teachers and provide an education for all children in the area. The private, subscription schools were no longer needed.

After its life as a school was finished, this octagonal structure served the toll keeper, whose house was built in the 1850's. In 1899, it was used as a chicken house. Since then, it has been preserved as a historical building.

On the 3rd Sunday of every month, visitors can stop in and check it out between 1 and 5 pm.
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