History of
Van Buren County High School

Van Buren County High School was
built in the late 1930’s with James Maurice Taft, Superintendent of Schools
that year, responsible for work beginning on the school. The second
envisioned by Taft would have cost the county an estimated $80,000. Aware
that this was a huge cost for the small county in the 1930’s, he set out to
find a way. After spending $309 for 103 acres of cut-over forest land, the
land was utilized by students and friends to cut trees for lumber; a
sandstone quarry was brought into operation on this same land.
After building a sawmill from junk-pile parts, the timber was sawed
by local men. The new high school was built with the stone and lumber and
the help of students. The first students to receive a high school education
at public expense was at Burritt College, a private institution operated
under the auspices of the Churches of Christ, which was on a contract basis
beginning the Fall of 1914 and continued until the opening of the
1938-39school term.
At the September 10, 1936 meeting of the Van Buren County Board of
Education --James M. Taft, Superintendent, Board members; Sam Gamble, C.L.
Russell, Marie Hillis, P.M. Shockley, Albert Jones, Sr., John Deweese and
Charlie Hollingsworth, a committee was appointed to purchase land and
equipment necessary to build a public high school in connection with a W.P.A.
and N.Y.A. project. This project was started under the direction of Supt.
Taft, but was not completed until the fall of 1940. Temporary buildings
secured for use during the 1938-39 school year was the York Academy and the
First Baptist Church of Spencer. The construction of the building was rushed
to completion and used to house part of the elementary grades. Graduation
exercises for the class of 1938-39 were conducted in this building.
The cost to Van Buren County for the original structure was $20,000.
Three additions have been built. The first one was completed in 1956. The
second addition (left wing and remodeling of the typing room) was done in
1969. The right wing was added in 1974, and the Industrial Arts building was
completed in 1985. This was the composition of the plant when the fatal fire
destroyed the main building on October 3, 1988.
Through valiant efforts of the local fire department and neighboring
departments, the Agriculture