Gettysburg Academy

Former boarding school in Pennsylvania From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gettysburg Academy (also known as the Classical Preparatory School and the Gettysburg Gymnasium)[1] was an antebellum boys' boarding school for which the vernacular architecture schoolhouse (now "Reuning Hall") was the "first home" of the Lutheran Theological Seminary at Gettysburg and Gettysburg College.[2][3]

Former names
  • Classical Preparatory School
  • Gettysburg Gymnasium
Active
  • Classical Preparatory School: June 25, 1827 (1827-06-25)
  • Gettysburg Gymnasium: 1829 (1829)
  • Gettysburg Academy: November 7, 1832 (1832-11-07)–1921 (1921)
FounderSamuel Simon Schmucker
Address
66–68 West High Street
,
Gettysburg
,
PA
,
17325
,
US

39.828307°N 77.232982°W / 39.828307; -77.232982
Quick facts Former names, Active ...
Gettysburg Academy
Former names
  • Classical Preparatory School
  • Gettysburg Gymnasium
Active
  • Classical Preparatory School: June 25, 1827 (1827-06-25)
  • Gettysburg Gymnasium: 1829 (1829)
  • Gettysburg Academy: November 7, 1832 (1832-11-07)–1921 (1921)
FounderSamuel Simon Schmucker
Address
66–68 West High Street
,
Gettysburg
,
PA
,
17325
,
US

39.828307°N 77.232982°W / 39.828307; -77.232982
CampusGettysburg College
Close

The March 19, 1810 incorporation by the commonwealth appropriated $2,000,[4][5] and the academy opened in 1814 for the school year with Samuel Ramsay as the first teacher.[6]

By 1822 the boarding school had three dormitories, libraries, and a gymnasium and beginning in 1826, the academy trustees allowed the Lutheran seminary to use the facility — D. Jacobs established a preparatory school in June 1827 (his brother was a mathematics professor).[7][8]

The facility was purchased at Sheriff's sale in 1829 by Samuel Simon Schmucker and designated the "Gettysburg Gymnasium".[5][9] The 1829 headmaster was Dr. Charles H. Huber, and 2 sons of Mexico's president-elect attended.[10] The last graduation was in 1835.[11]

When the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg began, the Reuning House was being used by Rebecca Eyster's Young Ladies Seminary,[7] which acted as an American Civil War hospital for casualties during the battle. Eyster's "School Halls" were advertised for rent in 1877,[12] the house was used as World War I officers' quarters, and Reuning House is now a private residence protected by a 1972 borough ordinance extending the historical district to include the building.[13]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI