Merlyn G. Cook School

A series of concrete pillars provide the main structure, with the flooring substructure and wall framing of insect-resistant ifil wood.

The windows are covered with rare ifil-wood shutters that pivot horizontally.

The building's interior is clad in wood planking typical of early 20th-century Chamorro construction.

The school has long served as a community meeting point, and was used as a place of refuge during World War II.

This article about a property in Guam on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.