The Glenville School in what is now Glenvil, Nebraska, United States was built in 1903 and extended in 1924 and 1950.
It was designed by Lincoln architect Alfred W. Woods or his firm, and was built by Hempel Brothers.
[2] It was the first substantial school in the small village of Glenville, which peaked in population at about 300 in the 1920s, and had declined to about half that in 1998[2] (although it had grown back to 310 in the 2010 census).
"[2] Both the outdoor playground and the combination of all grades in one school were progressive interests of William K. Fowler, who started in 1900 as the state Superintendent of Public Instruction.
This article about a property in Nebraska on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.