It was the first secondary-level industrial/vocational school in the United States: it "has been called the nation's first public-supported, coeducational industrial high school.
Golucke & Co. in Beaux Arts style.
It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1980.
It was a project of Carleton B. Gibson, who became Superintendent of schools in Columbus in 1896.
This article about a property in Georgia on the National Register of Historic Places is a stub.