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Agenda - 06-02-2009 - 4d
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Agenda - 06-02-2009 - 4d
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5/29/2009 4:25:53 PM
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6/2/2009
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Regular Meeting
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Agenda
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4d
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Minutes - 20090602
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2~ - <br />NP5 Form 10-90Q-a OMB No. 1024-0018 <br />~~6) <br />United States DeparEment of the interior <br />National Park Service <br />NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES <br />CONTINUATION SHEET - <br />Section 8 Page 17 Murphey School <br />Name of property <br />Orange County, NC <br />county and state <br />A few similar schools still existing in Orange County are comparable to Murphey School. St. <br />Mary's School, still intact, was construe#ed in 1931 as a Colonial Revival-style school to replace <br />the original fog s#ructure (now destroyed). It is located.on the east side of SR 1548, .12 miles north <br />of its junction with SR 1002, also in Orange County near Murphey School. It too received a 1936 <br />WPA brick auditorium addition, Neoclassical in style With three bays of twelve-over-twelve sash <br />and four brick pilasters topped with a brick pediment with a central lunette window. The St. Mary's <br />School auditorium is similar to the one located at Murphey School in style and form, but is much <br />less elaborate with fewer striking features. Seven other additions have been-constructed on the <br />site since 1931. Due to consolidation with the Hillsborough School system, St. Mary's School <br />.closed in 1943 and then reopened in 1970 as a private college preparatory school. Wilson Library <br />(1928-29) at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, along with several other. buildings on <br />that campus containing classical porticos, may weft have influenced the design of the Murphey <br />School auditorium addition. Another extant example similar to Murphey School in Orange County <br />is the intact White Crass School (c. 1933) located on the north side of NC 54 200 feet west of its <br />junction with'SR 1952. tt is also of brick construction with four classrooms and a central <br />auditorium space. White Cross School is considerably more modest in design and smaller than <br />Murphey School. Its most prominent features are its projecting side wings as well as groups of <br />windows on its elevations. White Cross School contains a recessed porch sheltered by a side- <br />gable roof supported by four wooden posts. A small pediment sits aver the central door on the <br />facade. Three other classroom buildings make up the White Cross School complex. <br />Congress established the Works Progress Administration (WPA) in April of 1935 to take over the <br />relief programs of the Public Works Administration and the Federal Emergency Relief <br />Administration. This agency provided funding for employment projects such as the construction of <br />roads, municipal buildings, schools, and~national parks, beautifrcation of cities and towns, and the <br />painting of tnurafs. Badger notes that "From 1935 to 1942 the WPA spent $173.7 million in North <br />Carolina."28 One of ten school projects funded through a WPA grant in Orange County, Murphey <br />School's new auditorium and water system eras similar to tk~e treatment at nearby St. Mary's <br />School. New schools constructed in the county with WPA funding included West Hillsboro School, <br />Hillsboro Negro School, and Chapel Hill High School. The remaining six projects, like Murphey <br />School, were given funding for the purpose of constructing an addition and adding technological <br />updates. These schools are: Carrboro School, Aycock School, St. Mary's School, Orange. Grove <br />2s Badger, Anthony. North Carolina and the New Deal. (Raleigh: North Carolina Division of Archives and <br />History, 1981), p. 41. <br />
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