Old Milwaukee — These students in a shoe bottoming class were bent...

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These students in a shoe bottoming class were bent over their work when the photographer came around the Milwaukee Vocational School in 1946. Signs and posters on the walls reminded them of the fine points about both feet and shoe construction. Vocational school training began to develop rapidly in Milwaukee in 1912, after passage of the first state compulsory continuation school attendance law in 1911. The law required that children between the ages of 14 and 16, who were working under permit, attend school for five hours a week. Vocational training expanded even more with the demand for skilled workers during and after World War I. The original six story red brick Vocational School building (now part of Milwaukee Area Technical College) was built at a cost of almost $4 million in 1926. At the time this picture was taken, the school offered more than 50 courses in 10 divisions, had a staff of 300 teachers and instructed an annual average of 35,000 students. Photograph and information provided by the Milwaukee Public Library local history collection.

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