09/21/2025
Odds and Ends From The MUSEUM!
By Trudy Wyman, Curator, Millinocket Society Museum
Granite Street School opened in the fall of 1955 as a K-6 elementary school on a site near the mill. This land, owned by GNP, is referred to in sources as McNamara’s field, Fred Peluso’s potato field or a turnip field. The new school was needed as basement rooms were in use at Aroostook Avenue and Katahdin Avenue Schools. All plans for Granite Street School are labeled “new grammar school."
At the 1954 town meeting, a warrant was presented to vote to “construct an elementary school building with ten classrooms, an all-purpose room and individual spaces for principal, clinic and superintendent.” The total cost of the building, equipment, grading, fencing and surfacing a playground area would cost less than $250,000. All work was to be done before September 1, 1955.
The eleven acres were gifted to the town by GNP and they also did the grading on the site. Construction was completed as planned for the fall opening of school 1955. Constructed of brick, the school had the ten planned classrooms, each with many windows and its own outside exit. It was the first school building in town to have no basement reflecting modern school building styles of the 1950’s.
Further changes were made in the 1960’s-early 1970’s with a new wing of eight classrooms for the upper grades and a project room (space for teacher aide, duplicator machine and more) being added. For a time, the school had space there for a student-run radio station.
In that same time frame, the window wall on the playground end of the all-purpose room was removed as two kindergarten classrooms were added at that end. The front lobby was also expanded and another room added on the stream side of the building. Another change occurred during the “energy crisis” of the 1970’s when the tall windows at Granite Street School were reduced in size and the individual outside doors were sealed.
By the 1990’s, declining population numbers led to the closing of Katahdin Avenue School and Aroostook Avenue School and those remaining students (K-4) moved to Granite Street School. This led to all grade 5 students joining the 6th, 7th, and 8th graders at the Millinocket Middle School for the next four year. Later another wing was added to Granite Street School with a cafeteria/all-purpose area with stage and music room, special education spaces and a larger library. Fifth graders then returned to Granite Street School.
At present, Granite Street School houses pre-K through fifth grade students. Go Granite Street Grizzlies!!
***Museum Store… OPEN Thurs-Sat Noon -3
The newest Bill Geller book Chesuncook Passages, 1903-1971: Loggers, Settlers, & Sports, $30 (see below for mail orders and to contact the museum)
Geller books, $30 each: #1 “Within Katahdin’s Realm, Log Drives & Sporting Camps,” #2 “West of Chesuncook North of Moosehead: Log Drives & Sporting Camps,1830-1971,” #3 “Rendezvous at
Chesuncook, 1827-1902; A Chronicle of Surveyors, Landowners, Loggers, Settlers and Sports” ***Millinocket Schoolhouses…A Look Back in Time, $20
*** The Northern magazine, scan, all issues 1921-28 – via email or thumb drive, $50.00
*** Prints The Northern magazine covers, town, mill, river drive photos
***Books: “Logging Towboats & Boom Jumpers” (Moody) $20.00; “Millinocket” (Duplisea) $20; “A Little Taste of History” cookbooks - $20; both Laverty books, $25 history & $10 architecture
*** Preowned yearbooks (SHS & St. Martin’s HS $10), preowned local books
*** Add $6 SH each mailed item.
Also available: Mt. Katahdin bottles, Fernwood cutouts, GNP caps & more!
*** By mail at Millinocket Historical Society, P. O. Box 11, Facebook, phone 922-9000 or by email at [email protected] Visit our website: www.millinockethistoricalsociety.org