Homestead School

[the-subtitle]

May 2014
First published in May 2001

Homestead School - 1908

Homestead School – 1908


In 1905, the Tamalpais Land & Water Company donated a half-acre parcel on the corner of Janes and Montford as the site of the first school in Homestead Valley. In 1907, the Mill Valley School District voters approved a school bond tax. A two room school built in 1907 at a cost of about $4000 opened in January 1908 with 60 pupils. It was described as, “a well built frame structure containing two large well ventilated class rooms, ante rooms, and a big basement.” William Mahoney was the architect.
Here’s what happened to the building in the late 1920’s. It was cut in half, and the two parts were separated. The result was two large houses, each on its own lot. They’ve been modified somewhat since then, but if you walk up Janes from Montford you can tell that the first two houses on the left were once one building. The rest of the story is folklore. The two families who lived in these houses for many years were good friends. When the husband in one house and the wife in the other house died, the widower and widow decided to marry and live in one of the houses. Who moved in with whom? The question remains unanswered.
In 1920, the Mill Valley School District bought a 1.7-acre parcel on the corner of Melrose and Montford for $2,250. A new two-room school was constructed. It opened in November 1921 and was initially named Laverne Public School. Edna Maguire, a UC-Berkeley graduate with teaching experience in central California was the first principal-teacher. In 1927 she assumed the same position at Tamalpais Park School. She retired from the Mill Valley system in 1954. In 1956, Edna Maguire School opened in Alto.
Classes were large in the 1920s. One year, Mrs. Keith Mc Lellan confronted 52 children in four grades. She lived two miles from the school at 211 Summit Ave. and probably took the train to Locust station and walked from there to the school.
In the 1930s the school, now known as Homestead School, closed for lack of pupils. In the 1940s it was reopened for grades one to four. In 1949 a second building with three classrooms was built. In 1954 another building with three classrooms was added. In 1966, the original 2-room school built in 1920 was demolished. “Portables” were brought in supplementing the permanent class rooms to serve grades kindergarten through 6.
In 1983 Homestead School was once again closed for lack of pupils. Class rooms were leased to various private enterprises. In1992 the Mill Valley School District leased the school to Marin Horizon School which made many improvements to the physical plant. Summer school began in June and a full toddler through eighth grade primary program began in September. And the future of Homestead School? The question remains unanswered.


If you have comments or questions about this article
or other topics pertaining to the history of Homestead Valley,
please feel free to e-mail Chuck Oldenburg.