![]() ![]() For sports fields, the students walked the short distance to Green Lake Playfield. Students were assigned from University Heights, McDonald, Green Lake, and Fairview. The building was designed in the 20th century Georgian style with red bricks and gray stone. ![]() The school was named for the Chief Justice of the U.S. Over 20 years later (1924-25), the Seattle School District purchased the same site as the location for a new intermediate school. The portable closed in June because a new Green Lake School would be opening in September. Green Lake School was overcrowded at the start of the 1901-02 school year, and the first of two annexes was opened along Ravenna Boulevard, between 68th and 69th Streets, for two classes in grades 1-4. Some of the buildings profiled are historic, some of recent vintage, and many no longer exist (new names and buildings not included in these profiles from 2000 have been added), but each plays or has played an important role in the education of Seattle's youth. It should be noted that these essays are from 2000. The profiles from the book are being made available as People's Histories on courtesy of Seattle Public Schools. That book, published in 2002 by Seattle Public Schools, compiled profiles of all the public school buildings that had been used by the school district since its formation around 1862. ![]() This People's History of John Marshall Intermediate School is taken from Building for Learning: Seattle Public School Histories, 1862-2000 by Nile Thompson and Carolyn J. ![]()
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