This page was created by Christine Liebson.
Case School of Applied Science
The first four years of the School's existence was in the Case family's home on Rockwell Street in downtown Cleveland - often referred to as the Case homestead. Classes were held in the family house, while the chemistry and physics laboratories were on the second floor of the barn. Astronomical observations were made in the back yard where a transit was set up.
Because Amasa Stone's gift to move Western Reserve College from Hudson to Cleveland in 1882 also included a provision for the purchase of land in the University Circle area for Case, it was only a matter of time before Case constructed a new college building on its new land and moved in 1885.
An October 1886 letter from George C. S. Southworth to J. Twing Brooks, urges the School's trustees to move Case back downtown after the devastating Case Main fire."...I respectfully and earnestly call your attention to the opportunity for rebuilding as near the heart of the city as possible....it would be dooming the Case School to carry a perpetual load of disadvantage, to rebuild upon the former site four miles from pretty much everything that a student wishes to personally inspect in the study of applied science."
[Placeholder not in DC]
1188 Portrait of Leonard Case, Jr., founder and namesake of Case School of Applied Science [also used on 180]
1354 Case Homestead, 1891 [also used on timeline]
School Facts: In 1881 the enrollment was 16 and tuition was $100. In 1884 the enrollment was 39 and tuition was $50