Oley Elementary and Junior High School (1888-1979)
Introduction
Text-to-speech Audio
Images
General John Hunt Oley
Portrait of General Oley
Flag Raising at Oley School, 1880s
5th Ave, from Oley School looking North along 13th St, 1889
Oley School as it appeared in 1893
Oley School, circa 1895
Faculty of Oley School, 1890s
Oley Elementary 4th grade class, 1906
First Huntington High School, ca. 1910
Huntington high school building, ca. 1910
Huntington high school, ca. 1910
Postcard of Huntington's first high school
Huntington High School and Oley School beyond, circa 1910
Oley School Playground, July 1934
Pupils in a classroom at Oley Elementary
Oley Junior High classroom
Oley Junior High School, 1951
Oley junior high school group, circa 1956
Backstory and Context
Text-to-speech Audio
John Hunt Oley was born in Utica, New York in 1830. During the Civil War, he served with the 7th Regiment of the New York National Guard and was one of six New Yorkers sent to Western Virginia to drill troops. There, he organized the 8th West Virginia Infantry, later the 7th West Virginia Cavalry. In 1863, Oley was promoted to colonel, and in 1865 he was named Brevet Brigadier-General for his gallant and meritorious service. After the war, Oley settled in Charleston, West Virginia. He moved to Huntington in 1871, where Collis P. Huntington employed him as a sales agent for his Central Land Company. In the city’s first election, Oley was elected recorder and treasurer. As recorder, Oley was charged with establishing the local school system. His efforts in this regard lead many to consider Oley to be the father of public education in the city of Huntington.
Prior to the construction of the Oley School, education in Huntington had taken place in relatively makeshift quarters. This changed when the city decided to construct a formal school building on 5th Avenue at 13th Street. The new school was named in honor of General Oley, who had passed away as construction neared completion in 1888. Built at a cost of about $35,000, the red brick building had ten rooms, an office, and a basement. It was fitted with all the “modern conveniences” of water, heat, light, slate Blackboards, and ventilation. At the outset, the building housed all grades, from first grade through high school, along with eleven teachers and the office of the superintendent.
In 1904, Huntington’s first high school, Central High School, was constructed just east of the Oley School on 5th Avenue. The total cost of the building, which contained over twenty rooms, was around $40,000. Following its completion, the upper grades were moved to the new school and Oley became an elementary school. The two buildings were eventually connected, forming a single structure that stretched from 13th Street to 14th Street. Within a few years, however, as Huntington’s population steadily grew, the original school buildings proved inadequate to house all twelve grades. In 1916, a new, larger high school was built on 8th Street between 9th and 10th Avenues. At this time, Central High School was renamed Central Junior High and began to serve grades 7 through 9. Around 1940, its name was changed to Oley Junior High.
Over time, with the opening of new schools and shifting demographics in Huntington, enrollments at Oley Elementary and Oley Junior High began to decline. Both schools were ultimately closed in 1977. Two years later, the buildings were demolished, although a gym at the junior high was preserved. The property was initially acquired by nearby River Park Hospital, who built a parking lot at the site of the former school. It was later purchased by St. Joseph Catholic High School, who still owns the property today.
Sources
Casto, James E. Legendary Locals of Huntington, West Virginia. Charleston, SC. Arcadia Publishing, 2013.
Casto, James E. Lost Huntington: Oley Elementary, Huntington Herald-Dispatch. May 12th 2014. Accessed November 22nd 2019. https://www.herald-dispatch.com/special/lost_huntington/lost-huntington-oley-elementary/article_8d32a0a9-acc8-5ff3-9bdf-94afefbb6d7a.html.
Casto, James E. Lost Huntington: Oley Junior High, Huntington Herald-Dispatch. July 1st 2019. Accessed November 22nd 2019. https://www.herald-dispatch.com/special/lost_huntington/lost-huntington-oley-junior-high/article_b88701fb-afa4-5766-aaac-4a0c10c6e4fb.html.
Geiger, Joe. John Hunt Oley, The West Virginia Encyclopedia. December 8th 2015. Accessed November 22nd 2019. https://www.wvencyclopedia.org/articles/1758.
Morgan, Benjamin S. Cork, Jacob F. Columbian History of Education in West Virginia. Charleston, WV. State of West Virginia, 1893.
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