Looking at this ponderous structure for a few  moments may lead you to two observations.   First, this is one of the largest and most impressive exhibits of  Romanesque Revival architecture in the metropolitan area.  There are many, many towers, turrets and  dormers with their graceful arched windows.   Note, also, the prominent roof.   Yet the building was erected with a rather warmly colored yellow or tan  bricks. This architectural style was quite popular in the late Nineteenth  Century and you can find a few houses nearby designed with a similar  architectural  approach.  But Romanesque styling was seldom, if ever,  used by architects after the time of World War I.  Architectural tastes certainly change  substantially and rapidly. 
    
  Second, the building was put up in the mid-1890s to  serve as the city’s major secondary school. It was originally named Central High School  but that title was transferred to the very large campus on Tuxedo at Elmhurst.  The United States was in advance of  most European nations in establishing a more or less universal system of locally  funded grammar schools.   The belief in  the value of formal education was very strong in this nation and so,  by late in the Nineteenth Century, city  school boards were expanding their activities to greatly increase the  proportion of student who went to class following grammar school.   Once again, the United States was in advance of  European nations in providing secondary schools for many youth.  However, it was not until after World War II  that high school graduation became the norm.   Even in this early Twentieth First century no more than about 80 percent  of teenagers complete secondary school.   But the prosperity of Detroit  rate payers in the late Nineteenth Century and the faith that many had in  education, led to the construction of this striking building.  Clearly, the city’s school board expected  that many Detroit  children would opt for a high school education.
  
  David MacKenzie, whose residence is just around the corner on Cass,  was principal of this high school.  In  the early Twentieth Century, science and medicine were slowly being added to  the curriculum of universities, but colleges at that time emphasized the  learning of the classical languages, mathematics, and reading the great works  of  philosophers, historians and play  writers.  MacKenzie—who, along with  Father Gabriel Richard—was one of Detroit’s most productive educational  entrepreneurs recognized that there were many student graduating from his  high school who would benefit from advanced training but, perhaps, not from  the  curriculum of the major  universities.  There was, at this time,  the slow development of junior colleges.  
  
  Mackenzie began to offer post-secondary courses in  the building you see pictured above as early as 1913.  By 1919, he established a separate unit  called the Detroit   Junior College here.  Four years later, that institution became a  four-year school known as the College of the City of Detroit.   Quickly, it became the third largest college in the state behind Michigan State  and the University   of Michigan.  By the early 1930s, the city’s Board of  Education was superintending a medical school—the Detroit  Medical College  founded in 1868; a school for training teachers—Detroit  Normal Training   School founded in 1881; and college-level programs in pharmacy  and engineering as well as the College of the City of Detroit.   This was not unusual.  By the  1920s, school boards in many of the larger cities were operating their own  normal schools or liberal arts colleges.   The Detroit School Board merged   their six post-secondary programs to form Wayne University  in 1934.  The university expanded after  that but was a city-run institution until the Constitution of the State of Michigan was amended in 1959 to make Wayne University  a state governed, rather than a city governed, institution.
  
  This building has been remodeled several times but  its original appearance has been maintained.   Its office space is now used by the College of Liberal Arts  and Sciences.
Architects:  William Malcomson and William Higginbotham
    Date of Opening: 1896
    Architectural style: Romanesque Revival
    Use in 2011: This building is the home of the College of Liberal Arts and  Sciences 
    Book describing the history of Wayne State University:  A History of Wayne State University in  Photographs by Evelyn Aschenbrenner, Charles K. Hyde and Bill McGraw (Detroit:  Wayne State University, Press: 2008).
    City of Detroit Designated Historic District: Not listed
    State of Michigan Registry of Historic Site:   This building is within the Wayne State University
   Buildings Historic District, P25,280
    National Register of Historic Sites: I do not know if this building is  specifically listed.
    Photograph: Ren Farley
    Description prepared: January, 2011
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