The first Whittier School was located at 1207
Fort Street. It was built in 1894 to relieve overcrowding at Central.
The building originally had four grade school classrooms, but
two additions in the late 1800's increased its size significantly,
and gave the building a basement and two floors.
In
1917, a fire consumed the entire roof of the building. The
building had a hip type roof before the fire. Whittier was
vacant for one year before the School Board decided to repair
it. The replacement roof was flat. The building had parapet
brick walls outside and plastered walls and ceilings on the
inside. The school was used as an elementary school until it
was condemned at the end of the 1937-38 school year. The building
served as a community arts and crafts center until it was reopened
as the District Administrative Offices in 1942.
Although the Whittier building was condemned in 1938, classes
were held in the junior high (later North Junior High) under
the name Whittier School for grades one, two and three until
1941.
The
post war years saw great growth in the Boise District and in
1948 Trustees authorized the construction of a new Whittier
School. The Chinese Gardens to the south side of the Boise
River gave rise to the village of Garden City, which had no
school. The new Whittier would serve the Garden City area and
the area south of State Street.
The school opened in the fall of 1949. Whittier was built
next to the Boise River and the playground area is on river
rock and sand. The grass area is hard to maintain because the
water disappears into the sandy soil and the grass turns brown
on the hot summer days.
Whittier School is located in the Model Cities area and received
the benefits from some of the federal programs funded in the
late 1960's and early 1970's. Some of the programs were kindergartens,
counselors, teachers' aides and equipment. It received a new
portable building to house kindergarten students in 1972.
|