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312 Donmoyer <br />Historical Context <br />This property is located on the block between Carroll Street and Fellows Street, facing <br />Donmoyer Street, in South Bend, Indiana. It is described as being part of the east half <br />and southwest quarter of lots 25-32 W 8t K Beverly Heights 2nd Addition to South <br />Bend. <br />The Collegiate Gothic style, James Monroe School at 312 Donmoyer Avenue, was <br />constructed in 1931. The board of education proposed the construction of a new <br />elementary school building at the southwest corner of Fellows Street and Donmoyer <br />Avenue in l 931. The appointed architects were Freyermuth and Maurer, and the cost of <br />the structure was estimated to be around $300,000.00. The date targeted for the <br />opening of the school was September 1931. The school was to have an instructional <br />capacity of approximately 850 pupils from kindergarten to the sixth grade. The James <br />Monroe school was meant to accommodate all elementary students in the south central <br />part of the City, thereby relieving James Whitcomb Riley school of all elementary classes. <br />The formal acceptance of the James Monroe School was made by the Board of Education <br />by the middle of September, 1931. <br />The architects, Freyermuth and Maurer, made an extensive study of the site and <br />surroundings, concluding that the terrain was rolling in nature and therefore lent itself to <br />the English Gothic Style, which they used in the design of the school building. The <br />architects planned a system of terraces from the level of Donmoyer Avenue to the higher <br />elevation of the site from which the building rose. The structure was built by the Smogor <br />Lumber Company and eventually cost $330,000.00. The school was dedicated in a <br />ceremony in November of 1931, which was attended by two direct descendants of James <br />Monroe, the fifth president of the United States. The honored guests were, Mrs. Rose <br />Governeur Hoes, great grand daughter of the president and her son, Laurence Governeur <br />Hoes, an attorney. Miss Minnie Suchanek, former principal of Perley School, was named <br />the first principal of the James Monroe School. <br />In 1935 parents, patrons and superintendent, Frank Allen, discussed adding seventh, <br />eighth and ninth grades to Monroe School. The issue was voted down only to be passed <br />in the 1960s. <br />The building under went extensive restoration in the 1980s, receiving the Southhold <br />award of restoration excellence. <br />~'it~~ t~ ~~~r~~ ~ ~~~fi~ <br />OCT 2 ~ 1999 <br />LoI;~TTa ~. Qum <br />CITY CLEtTIS, moo. ®£• Fii/~ II:. <br />