Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School
Warrenville Elementary School

Warrenville Elementary School

National Register Listing
Street Address:
115 Timmerman Street, Warrenville, SC (Aiken County)
Alternate Name:
Warrenville Graded School

NRHP Nomination Form

NRHP Maps


Record Number:
S10817702034
Description and Narrative:
Warrenville Elementary School, originally known as Warrenville Graded School, is an excellent example of the Classical Revival style of school architecture that flourished as a direct result of expanded state support for education in the first quarter of the 20th century. It also represents a key component of the paternalistic social and economic system that characterized textile mill villages in piedmont South Carolina from 1900-1945. From its construction in 1925, Warrenville school was in continuous use until 1992 as an educational institution for mill village children. The school is a large, rectangular, two-story brick building located at the west end of the Warrenville mill village. In 1954, two one-story wings were added to the rear (south) and west sides of the building, creating its present C-shaped plan. The school's original brick and stone façade features baroque massing and is encircled by a full entablature and projecting cornice with a parapet above the roofline. The main façade is defined by slightly projecting central and end pavilions. The entablature here contains a frieze of four stone rondelles under a pediment featuring a bullseye window with cut keystones. The school is one of seven schools in Aiken County designed by W.W. Simmons & Son, an obscure architecture firm working out of Augusta, Georgia during the 1920s and active until 1951. Listed in the National Register May 22, 2002.
Period of Significance:
1925;1925 – 1952
Level of Significance:
Local
Area of Significance:
Architecture;Social History
National Register Determination:
listed
Date of Certification:
2002-05-22
Date of Boundary Increase:
No Boundary Increase
Location:
Aiken County;Warrenville

Related places
Aiken County
Warrenville