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Our
History
The 1944-45 Survey of School-Building
Needs of Cincinnati, Ohio, anticipated annexations of areas north and
east of College Hill and predicted that, in view of population growth
from such annexations, there would ultimately be need for a junior high
school in northeast College Hill. Early acquisition of a suitable site
was recommended. On September 23, 1946, the Board of Education designated
property on the north side of North Bend Road opposite Lantana Avenue
as the school site. This was part of the Crawford's Old Men's Home property
which had been left by John T. Crawford, a Civil War veteran. According
to his will, this property was to be used as "an asylum and home
for aged, indigent, worthy colored men, preference to be given those who
have suffered the miseries of American slavery.
On March 10, 1947, the Board purchased
the tract at a cost of $20,000. The area acquired was figured at 13.594
acres. Because of the kind of institutional ownership, court action was
necessary to clear the title and it was not until October 13, 1947, that
the Board really owned the site. On September 27, 1952, the Board sold
a small portion (approximately .096 acre) to the City at a price of $1,760.
Since construction of a school on the site was in the indefinite future,
on May 23, 1949, the Board leased of the property to the Public Recreation
Commission. The Commission constructed four baseball fields, for immediate
use. On April 11, 1955, the lease was absorbed into the contract between
the Board of Education and the Public Recreation Commission governing
joint development and use of properties between the two bodies and known
as the ''Continuing Agreement.''
In 1962, the Survey of School-Building
Plant Needs recommended that an elementary school for 500 pupils be built
in the northeast College Hill area. (Underlying the recommendation was
the assumption that the school would be constructed on the site originally
intended for a junior high school, which, with the passing of years and
the failure of extensive annexations, seemed no longer properly located
for such a secondary school.) Trustees of the board were considering disposing
of the remaining land and buildings of the Home. The structures of the
Crawford's Old Men's Home were old and run down and practically no persons
were being accommodated. Because of this, on June 8, 1964 the Board of
Education designated the balance of the Crawford's Home property as the
site for the proposed elementary school. On July 6, 1964, the Board accepted
an offer of sale at $75,000. The area acquired was about five acres.
On July 6, 1964, Glaser & Myers &
Associates, Architects, began designing the school with two kindergarten
rooms, ten primary classrooms, five intermediate classrooms, one music
classroom, one art and crafts room, one science classroom, one general
purpose/resource center room, a combination cafeteria-auditorium, a gymnasium
and auxiliary rooms. These facilities raised capacity from 500 pupils
to 660. In setting up the size of the school, it was recognized that as
the area east of the school became more densely developed, another elementary
school would soon be needed somewhere near Winton Road.
Studies of the development of the former
Crawford's Home site indicated that the school could be set back from
North Bend Road and that a branch library could be constructed in front
of it. The parking areas for the school and the playfield would then be
of use to the library also. On May 3, 1965, the Board of Education and
the Public Library entered into a lease of land on which there was subsequently
erected the Northern Hills Branch Library*. The Architects employed by
the Board and by the Library cooperated to make the library building and
the school building architecturally compatible.
Contracts for construction of the school
were awarded July 6, 1965, totaling $983,102. On November 8, 1965, the
Board named the school Pleasant Hill Elementary School. Pleasant Hill
was the name used for what is now College Hill when the area was platted
about 1820 by William Carey and Jabez Tunis. In 1832, Freeman G. Cary
began a boys' school called Pleasant Hill Academy. The Academy became
Farmers' College and later the Ohio Military Institute and now Aiken High
School. Pleasant Hill Elementary School was substantially completed by
September 1966, at which time it was first occupied.
Prepared in 1966 by Cincinnati Board
of Education for the Pleasant Hill School dedication booklet .
* Now the College Hill Branch Library
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