place

Sri Atmananda Memorial School (Texas)

AC with 0 elementsBuildings and structures in Austin, TexasDefunct schools in TexasEducation in Austin, TexasHigh schools in Austin, Texas
National Register of Historic Places in Austin, TexasPages containing links to subscription-only contentPrivate K-12 schools in TexasSchool buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in TexasSubscription required using via
Sri atamananda school austin 4
Sri atamananda school austin 4

Sri Atmananda Memorial School was a private school that for sixteen years (1995–2011) was located in a historic property north and east of the Hyde Park neighborhood of Austin, Texas. At the end it served grades K-12. Previously it only covered elementary school. The founding director of the school was Pattye Henderson, whose family had previously owned the school site, an historic mansion and 10-acre (40,000 m2) campus at 4100 Red River Street in Austin, Texas, originally owned by cotton entrepreneur E.H. Perry and his family.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Sri Atmananda Memorial School (Texas) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Sri Atmananda Memorial School (Texas)
Red River Street, Austin

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Sri Atmananda Memorial School (Texas)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 30.300833333333 ° E -97.7225 °
placeShow on map

Address

Commodore Perry Estate

Red River Street 4100
78751 Austin
Texas, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

Sri atamananda school austin 4
Sri atamananda school austin 4
Share experience

Nearby Places

Shadow Lawn Historic District (Austin, Texas)
Shadow Lawn Historic District (Austin, Texas)

The Shadow Lawn Historic District is a historic district in central Austin, Texas that has a cohesive collection houses built in the southeast portion of Hyde Park during the late 1920s and 1930s. Roughly bounded by 38th Street, 39th Street, Avenue G, and Duval Street, the district includes several homes of historic interest from the turn of the twentieth century, including the Col. Monroe M. Shipe House, Hildreth-Flanagan-Heierman House, Frank M. and Annie G. Covert House, Page-Gilbert House, Smith-Marcuse-Lowry House, and the Oliphant-Walker House. This subdivision was platted by Hyde Park founder Monroe M. Shipe and indicated by concrete markers, some of which still stand today. Shipe's own home is located at the corner of 39th Street and Avenue G. The district was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.Shadow Lawn's historical significance stems from the architecture of its houses. The district features a number of dwellings with modest Tudor Revival detailing characteristic of historicist "cottage" bungalows built in the 1930s. The dominance of this architectural form is an important feature that distinguishes the district from nearby housing clusters, as no other area in the northern suburbs of Austin contains as high a concentration of Tudor Revival dwellings. Unlike the bungalows in the nearby Hyde Park Historic District, these houses utilized more expensive masonry veneer rather than cheaper wood siding.