The Whittier Community Center needs your help
A nonprofit fundraiser supporting
Whittier Community CenterFunds are needed to improve and maintain this 112 year old building and the community playground.
$0
raised by 0 people
$2,000 goal
The Whittier Community Center in Logan, Utah, provides meeting space for about twenty regular tenants and for special events such as weddings and dances in a classic 112-year-old school building. Our tenants include several types of dance and performing arts instruction, five kinds of martial arts, four churches, a charter school, and a homeschool co-op, among others. The Whittier also boasts the only fully handicap-accessible playground in northern Utah.
The Whittier Community Center is housed in what was originally the Whittier School, which was built in 1908 for approximately $20,000. The school had one large classroom for each grade K-6 at the time.
The Whittier School was the first school in Utah to offer kindergarten instruction and, in 1930 opened the state’s first public school library. In 1948, the much-needed addition of a kitchen, auditorium/stage, and restrooms was completed for $25,000.
Several well-known educators and administrators were associated with the Whittier School over its sixty-year tenure as a public school and teacher training school. Two of the best known were Edith Bowen (head teacher 1932-36) and Emma Eccles Jones (kindergarten teacher 1926-36), who worked without pay for three years to help the fledgling program get off the ground.
In 1968, the Whittier School was closed as a public school by the Logan School District. It then became the Clinical Teaching Center – a day training program for intellectually-disabled children – and served in that capacity until 1974 when the program was moved to a new facility on the USU campus. From 1974-91, the building housed a community arts center known as the Alliance for the Varied Arts.
The Whittier Community Center finally came into being in 1992 when the old school was purchased by a group of citizens from the Logan School District for $51,000. By the following year, the group had obtained 501c-3 non-profit status and was hosting regular classes and events. The Whittier’s first tenants were the Cache Valley Civic Ballet and School of Ballet, Cache Aikido Club, Young Artists Guild, Girl Scouts, and the Refugee Center.
On September 25, 2000, the Whittier School building was put on the National Registry of Historic Places.
The Whittier Community Center currently serves up to 3,500 people per week who come to participate in a variety of programs. Many others bring their children to play on the disabled-inclusive playground, the construction of which was the result of the cumulative effort of a large group of volunteers in 2009.
The mission of the Whittier Community Center is to (1) enhance our community and neighborhood through the venue of a community and neighborhood center and to (2) restore and maintain the historically significant Whittier School building.
Maintaining the building is an on going process. Some projects, like touch-up painting, are small. Other project such as replacing the playground floor or getting a new parking lot are very expensive. Any size donation is greatly appreciated.