After holding classes in the old Lutheran church in Washington Park since 1891, Zion Lutheran
Church dedicated a new parochial school at the southeast corner of Decatur and
Madison Streets on September 24, 1899. A
diagram of the Lutheran Parochial School is visible on the 1905 Sanborn Fire
Insurance map.
The builder of the school was George Feick, a member
of the Zion Lutheran Church’s congregation.
George Feick was also the architect and builder of
Zion Lutheran Church’s new building which was under construction at the time
that the school opened. The first service in the new Zion Lutheran Church
building was on November 19, 1899.
The Reverend G. Mochel of Fremont gave a sermon on “Christian
Education” at the dedication of the Lutheran School. An article in the
September 25, 1899 issue of the Sandusky Register reported that the school,
constructed from Sandusky limestone, was “one of the finest and most complete”
buildings in the city. The lot for the school had been purchased for $1000, and
the schoolhouse was built for $6000. Rev. Theodore J.C. Stellhorn
concluded the dedication service with prayer, and all were invited in to view
the new Lutheran school.
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