Located on the property of the Andrew Baldwin House, 63 Main Street in North Stonington, is an 1814 one-room schoolhouse. Originally located on Taugwonk Road in Stonington, the school was in operation until the 1920s. In the late twentieth century, it was moved to its current location by Fred and Alma Lampert, who owned the Baldwin House. The couple had also built a gristmill and a replica of the original blacksmith shop on the property and used the old carriage house as a museum of historical artifacts. Their property contained the foundation of the North Stonington village’s own lost schoolhouse and the 1814 school building was moved onto it. The Limperts furnished the schoolhouse based on a photograph they received from Marcia Bentley Thompson (1892-1990) that showed her on her first day as a teacher in 1911 in a one-room school in the Clarks Falls section of North Stonington. When the restoration was completed the Limperts named it the Marcia Thompson Schoolhouse.

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Marcia Thompson Schoolhouse (1814)

2 thoughts on “Marcia Thompson Schoolhouse (1814)

  • May 19, 2018 at 6:08 am
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    Where is the sign that was on the building? As of 5/18/18 it is missing. Thank you.

  • May 20, 2018 at 1:33 am
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    I believe it just said “Marcia Thompson School.”

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