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Constructed in 1781 to house the
Latin School which was under the care of the Presbyterian congregation in
Carlisle, Pennsylvania, "Old College" fronted on Liberty Alley on Town Lot #219, the lot
donated by Thomas and John Penn
on March 3, 1773. The construction of this brick building, according
to the records of contractor John Creigh, cost £42/3/5½. An addition,
faced with stone, was authorized by the Board of Trustees of Dickinson College
on October 20, 1785, and was completed at a cost of $583.62. With the
expansion completed, the property was legally transferred to the College
trustees on October 3, 1788.
The first classes of the undergraduate courses were taught in the building until in 1802, in anticipation of the completion
of a new building, the trustees of the College sold “Old College” to Charles
McClure for $533.33. The College was granted the right to continue
its use of the building, however, after the “New
College” was destroyed by fire. Once Dickinson permanently vacated
“Old College” in 1805, the building reverted to Charles McClure. Following
McClure's death in 1811, the building came under the ownership of several
schools in succession until, through carelessness or arson, it burned down
on April 28, 1860. A new schoolhouse was then constructed on the site
following the same design, and the image which appears here shows that all-brick
building.
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