The Free School of Evanston was an alternative school that existed in Evanston, Illinois, United States from 1971 to 1976, for five school years.

Influences

The Free School was influenced by Summerhill School. At meetings, parents, students, and teachers were all equal, each having one vote. Tuition was based on a sliding scale percentage of parents' income. The school did not pursue educational accreditation.

Location

The school rented space at:

School yearsSpaceBuildingAddressCoordinates
1971-72basementUnitarian Church of Evanston[1]1330 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, Illinois42°02′33″N 87°41′21″W / 42.04262°N 87.68912°W / 42.04262; -87.68912
1972-76many roomsWheadon United Methodist Church[2]2214 Ridge Avenue, Evanston, Illinois42°03′29″N 87°41′11″W / 42.05817°N 87.68648°W / 42.05817; -87.68648

Student body

The school enrolled more than 100 students, aged 5–16, divided into lower, middle, and upper age groups. Most were from the Chicago suburbs, with a few from Chicago's inner city neighborhoods.

Principals

School year(s)Principal
1971-72 ?
1972-74Nelson Armour[3][4]
1974-75 ?
1975-76 ?

See also

References

  1. Unitarian Church of Evanston
  2. Church later renamed. See "Living in Evanston".
  3. Nelson Armour
  4. Armour, Nelson. "Comment on "Nelson, can you..."". Profile. Facebook. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
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