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SCHOOL ARCHITECTURE.

PLANS AND DESCRIPTION OF THE WESTERN FEMALE PUBLIC HIGH SCHOOL BuildING, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND.

THIS building is located on Fayette street, about thirty feet west of Paca street. It stands on one of the highest eminences in the city of Baltimore, and has a front of seventy-seven feet, including two towers twenty-two feet square, which project four feet, each side of the main building, and a depth of one hundred and thirty-four feet. In the rear the building is eighty-eight feet, including the towers. It is capable of accommodating five to six hundred girls. The style of Architecture is Italian. There is a tower in each corner for stairways. Besides the stairways the towers will contain several rooms. They project fifteen feet from the facade of the main building, and form a Galilee or enclosed porch in front. The doors and windows are round top. Those of the towers are unequal triplets. Those of the flank are formed into couplets. The lower floor is divided into nine recitation rooms, including the chemical hall, which is twenty-four by eighty feet. The other recitation rooms are twenty-two by twenty-eight feet. The study room, which is in the second story, is one hundred and sixteen feet ten inches in length and sixty-five feet wide in the clear. Its altitude is twenty feet. There are two Female High Schools in Baltimore, the Eastern and the Western. They were organised in 1844. They have been found eminently useful in affording to young ladies the opportunity of receiving instruction in the higher branches of education. Cost of lot, $20,000; of building and furniture, $30,000.

Fig. 2. BASEMENT AND FOUNDATION.

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K-Furnaces.

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-The small dots represent flues, for heated air, and for ventilation. Each ventilating flue is eight inches in diameter and terminates in a smoke flue on each side of the building.

Fig. 4. SECOND FLOOR.

H-Towers.

I-Saloon and Lecture Room-seat 500 girls.
K-Rostrum.

ROOF

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PLANS OF PRIMARY AND GRAMMAR SCHOOL BUILDINGS IN BALTIMORE, MD. THE following plans were prepared by Mr. J. J. Husband, of the firm of Avery & Husband, Architects, Baltimore, with the assistance of the Superintendent of Public Schools, Rev. J. N. M'Jilton, D. D., under instructions from the Building Committee of the School Board in 1867.

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GRAMMAR SCHOOL, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND, (Front Elevation.)

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PUBLIC GRAMMAR SCHOOL, BALTIMORE, MARYLAND. Transverse section, showing sash partitions, and framing of roof.

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