Bark Street School

It is a single-story wood-frame structure, set on a cobblestone foundation, and topped by a hip roof with a louvered square cupola at its center.

Its roof has wide eaves and banded windows on the sides, reminiscent of the Prairie School of architecture.

Its main entrance is set in a projecting vestibule section, with a shed-roof hood supported by large triangular knee brackets, and is topped by a round-arch transom window.

[2] The building was designed by Louis G. Destremps & Son and built in 1905, replacing a single-room schoolhouse on the same site.

Due to increasing enrollments (it was over its nominal capacity of 80 students by 1920), it was enlarged with a major expansion adding two classrooms c. 1930.