Historical Architecture

YMCA West Federal Youngstown - Historical Image

Tudor Gothic Building

Circa 1930/31

Youngstown architects Barton E. Brooke and Harold R. Dyer designed an impressive Tudor Gothic Style building to house the West Federal Branch, which was built at a cost of almost $200,000. The four-story building’s exterior was finished in brick, with buff and grey stone foundation blocks, pilasters, doorway arches, water tables, window lintels and sills, and a slate roof with copper flashings and ridge caps. The interior plan included social rooms, locker rooms and a swimming pool on the first floor, a banquet room and gymnasium on the second floor and dormitory rooms that accommodated 60 people on the second, third and fourth floors

The Youngstown YMCA held a cornerstone laying ceremony for the new West Federal Branch on December 28, 1930. Charged with setting the stone were Youngstown Councilman William S. Vaughan, the first African American to serve the City in that capacity, and Simeon S. Booker, Jr., the 12-year-old son of the branch’s Executive Secretary. Construction continued through the following spring and summer, leading up to the building’s dedication on August 16, 1931. Numerous local dignitaries, clergy, and board members and management of the Youngstown YMCA prayed, sang hymns, and welcomed addresses from Ohio Governor George White and Senator Camilo Osias, Representative of the Philippine Islands in the United States Congress.

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