
#14-9 McGuffey Museum Oxford, Ohio
N 39° 30.427 W 084° 44.156
16S E 694652 N 4375501
Quick Description: McGuffey Museum offers free guided tours to groups of any size. For individuals or families, no advance reservation is required. If you have a large number of people, we ask that you schedule your tour at least two weeks in advance. Please contact McGuffey Museum at 513-529-8380 or e-mail at McGuffeyMuseum@muohio.edu to schedule your group tour.
Location: Ohio, United States
Date Posted: 12/20/2007 7:45:13 PM
Waymark Code: WM2TM4
Views: 69
Long Description:Side A : "William Holmes McGuffey House"
William Holmes McGuffey (1800-1873) was a Miami University faculty
member in 1836 when he compiled the first edition of the McGuffey
Eclectic Reader in this house. His Reader taught lessons in
reading, spelling, and civic education by using memorable stories
of honesty, hard work, thrift, personal respect, and moral and
ethical standards alongside illustrative selections from literary
works. The six-edition series increased in difficulty and was
developed with the help of his brother Alexander Hamilton McGuffey.
After the Civil War the Readers were the basic schoolbooks in
thirty-seven states and by 1920 sold an estimated 122 million
copies, reshaping American public school curriculum and becoming
one of the nation's most influential publications.
Side B : ""
McGuffey lived at this site in a small frame house in 1828, and in
1833 built this brick home in the Federal vernacular style common
to the area. The west wing was added about 1860 in the first of a
series of renovations typical of nineteenth-century domestic
architecture in the Miami Valley. From the 1850s to 1958 several
Oxford families owned the property. At the Miami University
Sesquicentennial in 1958, the University purchased the house from
the Wallace P. Roudebush family, and it was endowed by Emma Gould
Blocker to serve as a museum of University history in honor of
McGuffey's legacy. The museum opened to the public in 1960 and the
house was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1966. It
exhibits such unique artifacts as the octagonal table upon which
the McGuffey Eclectic Reader was designed and the lectern McGuffey
used as professor of Ancient Languages and Literature and
University Librarian.