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John McMillan's Log School

John McMillan's Log School
JohnMcMillanLogSchool1780s.jpg
The log school in 2010
General information
Type Log building
Architectural style Vernacular architecture
Location Outside the Canonsburg Middle School
Address 25 East College Street
Canonsburg, Pennsylvania
Town or city Canonsburg, Pennsylvania
Country United States
Coordinates 40°15′38″N 80°11′11″W / 40.26053°N 80.18632°W / 40.26053; -80.18632Coordinates: 40°15′38″N 80°11′11″W / 40.26053°N 80.18632°W / 40.26053; -80.18632

John McMillan's Log School is a landmarklog building in Canonsburg, Pennsylvania that was the site of John McMillan's frontier latin school during the 1780s. It is a symbol of Canonsburg and Canonsburg's educational tradition. In 1930, The Pittsburgh Press said that the building was "viewed by the pioneers with even more reverence than Pittsburgh now view the towering Cathedral of Learning in Oakland." It is one of the oldest buildings in Western Pennsylvania. It is the "oldest educational building west of the Allegheny Mountains."

The school grew into Canonsburg Academy, which eventually developed into Washington & Jefferson College.

The building is rectangular in shape and is 14 feet long.

It was originally located in a field a mile south of Canonsburg. McMillan based the school on the William Tennent's Log College in eastern Pennsylvania. The building doubled as a stable when McMillan was not teaching classes. After only a year, the original building was destroyed by fire and rebuilt. The curriculum was a generalized classical education, including mathematics, grammar, rhetoric, natural history, Greek, and Latin, with a focus on preparing young men for Presbyterian ministry. It was moved to its current location in front of the Canonsburg Middle School, which stood of the location of Jefferson College, in 1895.

After McMillan died in 1833, his family continued to operate his farm and used the building as a workshop space. Jefferson College students often made the pilgrimage from Canonsburg to the building. In 1894, the building was offered to Jefferson Academy, which then occupied the former Jefferson College campus. Jefferson Academy closed in 1910 and the maintenance of the building fell to Phi Gamma Delta and Phi Kappa Psi, two fraternities that were founded at Jefferson College. In 1930, the building was adopted by the national officers of Phi Gamma Delta. The original preservation plan called for the college to be protected by a steel and glass canopy. The fraternity agreed to fund the restoration of the building.


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