Lyles Consolidated School
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Front of the school
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Location | 953 County Road 500 W, Lyles Station, Indiana |
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Coordinates | 38°22′11″N 87°39′36″W / 38.3697°N 87.6601°WCoordinates: 38°22′11″N 87°39′36″W / 38.3697°N 87.6601°W |
Area | 2.3 acres (0.93 ha) |
Built | 1919 |
Architectural style | Prairie School |
MPS | Indiana's Public Common and High Schools MPS |
NRHP Reference # | 99001111 |
Added to NRHP | September 9, 1999 |
Lyles Consolidated School is a historic school in Lyles Station, Indiana. The third school to be located in Lyles Station, it was opened in 1919 and used until 1958. Abandoned for nearly forty years, it had deteriorated almost to the point of total collapse by 1997. The Lyles Station Historic Preservation Corporation was founded in June 1997, to preserve and promote the history of the Lyles Station community. Its major project was restoration of the schoolhouse, intending to use it as a living history museum to educate others both about Lyles Station's history and the daily school routine in the early twentieth century. The school was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1999. Restoration of the site was completed in 2003.
The community of Lyles Station, which also includes its school, is an unincorporated community in Patoka Township, Gibson County, Indiana. Lyles Station is one of Indiana's early black rural settlements and the only one remaining. The rural settlement dates from 1849. It was formally named Lyles Station in 1886 to honor Joshua Lyles, a free African American who was one of its early settlers. Lyles migrated with his family from Tennessee to Indiana around 1837.
Lyles Station reached its peak in the years between 1880 and 1912, when major structures in the community included a school, railroad depot, a post office, a lumber mill, two general stores, and two churches. By the turn of the twentieth century, Lyles Station had fifty-five homes and a population of more than 800 people; however, the farming community never fully recovered from the Great Flood of 1913, which destroyed much of the town. Most of its residents left to find higher paying jobs and additional education in larger cities. By 1997, approximately fifteen families remained at Lyles Station, nearly all of them descended from the original settlers.
In 1864 Joshua Lyles donated the land to build a school in the community. The first school in what became Lyles Stations was subscription school, where parents paid a fee for their children to attend. Established about 1865, its classes were held in a local church building. The community's second school, a three-room schoolhouse, replaced the earlier school. It was built across the road from the Wayman Chapel African Methodist Episcopal Church.