The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

90 YEARS YOUNG

Rupert Elementary School to celebrate 90th anniversar­y

- By Evan Brandt ebrandt@21st-centurymed­ia.com @PottstownN­ews on Twitter

POTTSTOWN »

We should all be so lucky — to look so good at 90 years old.

But with a shiny new wing, repointed brick and a new roof, Rupert Elementary School — Pottstown’s oldest school building — is in pretty good shape.

That’s a good thing because Rupert is being thrown a birthday party on Saturday, Sept. 8 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

The event will include food trucks with pizza, ice cream, BBQ and snow cones.

Games including a dunk tank, a bounce house, an inflatable obstacle course, bowling, tennis, mini golf, corn hole, Large Jenga, Large Checkers, Large Connect 4 and even free bike helmets will be featured.

Of course, things were probably a bit more subdued on Aug. 29, 1928.

That’s when the original dedication was made and according to the original program, there was some music, the “passing of the key” and some speeches, followed by the “Star Spangled Banner” and a benedictio­n.

The groundbrea­king had occurred a little more than a year before with “Professor Rupert” digging the first shovel full of dirt.

“Professor Rupert” is, of course, William Whitehead Rupert, who had come to Pottstown from Chester County nearly 50 years before. He was Pottstown’s very first superinten­dent of schools and the educator for whom the school is named.

It was 1879 when the Pottstown School Board decided that the high school needed to be divided into two distinct schools “with boys under a male teacher and girls under a female teacher,” according to a 2009 article published in The Mercury by local historian Michael T. Snyder.

(Snyder also wrote the Rupert Family History that was included in a time capsule created in 1978 at the school’s 50th anniversar­y and is available online at www.pottsmerc.com.)

Although that decision to hire a male teacher for the boys was made in May, it wasn’t until Aug. 28 that Rupert arrived in Pottstown and “took rooms at the residence of Dr. and Mrs. Brooke Davis,” according to the Aug. 28 1879 edition of The Daily Pottstown Ledger.

At the time, the borough’s population was 5,305 and the schools had 709 students and 18 teachers.

At the time, there were only 70 students of high school age and no high school building, so they were taught in several classrooms at the Washington School building at Penn and Beech streets, the site of the current school administra­tion building.

In 1888, when parts of “Pottsgrove Township” became part of the borough, the population jumped to more than 13,000 and the number of students also jumped from 1,074 to 1,766, according to Snyder’s research.

With the sudden rise in student population, the school board voted unanimousl­y on July 11 of that year to name Rupert as the first superinten­dent of Pottstown Schools.

So popular and effective was Rupert, that on June 12, 1913, on the occasion of his 25th year as superinten­dent, a special ceremony was held with testimonia­ls and gifts including a “Russian wallet purse filled containing $100 in gold” and five weeks vacation, Snyder wrote.

In 1922, Rupert reached the mandatory retirement age of 70 and he stepped down, but returned five years later to kick off constructi­on on the school which still bears his name.

The cost of constructi­on? Only $124,849.03.

Over the years, the Tudor-style building has seen several renovation­s and housed countless teachers and students.

One of those students was Linda Kachel, who was

in fifth grade at Rupert in 1952.

A generation later, she sent three sons to Rupert.

Kachel still lives on Queen Street and volunteers in the school as well.

One of those sons grew up to be the principal of Rupert Elementary School — Matthew Moyer.

Moyer will be front and center Saturday when his school celebrates its 90th

birthday.

He is currently Pottstown’s longest-serving principal and, who knows, may be here to help celebrate the school’s 100th birthday as well.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? The original program for the dedication of Rupert School in 1928.
SUBMITTED PHOTO The original program for the dedication of Rupert School in 1928.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? W.W. Rupert at the time of the 1928 dedication of the building that bears his name.
SUBMITTED PHOTO W.W. Rupert at the time of the 1928 dedication of the building that bears his name.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Rupert Elementary School as it appears today after its $9 million renovation and expansion project was completed in 2014.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Rupert Elementary School as it appears today after its $9 million renovation and expansion project was completed in 2014.
 ?? PHOTO FROM RUPERT FACEBOOK PAGE ?? Rupert Elementary School Principal Matt Moyer with some of his students.
PHOTO FROM RUPERT FACEBOOK PAGE Rupert Elementary School Principal Matt Moyer with some of his students.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? The Rupert school band in 1938, Elizabeth Jenkins director.
SUBMITTED PHOTO The Rupert school band in 1938, Elizabeth Jenkins director.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? This photo of Rupert Elementary School’s fifth-grade class of 1952-1953 includes a student named Linda Kachel, who is the mother of Matthew Moyer, the current principal of Pottstown Elementary School, a Rupert alum himself. All three of her sons attended Rupert and she still lives on Queen Street and volunteers at the school.
SUBMITTED PHOTO This photo of Rupert Elementary School’s fifth-grade class of 1952-1953 includes a student named Linda Kachel, who is the mother of Matthew Moyer, the current principal of Pottstown Elementary School, a Rupert alum himself. All three of her sons attended Rupert and she still lives on Queen Street and volunteers at the school.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Rupert Elementary School as it appeared in 1978 during its 50th anniversar­y celebratio­n.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Rupert Elementary School as it appeared in 1978 during its 50th anniversar­y celebratio­n.

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