Description

In 1996, OPMS moved to the present location on Hills Shop Road in Auburn, Georgia. In 1999, Gus and Todd Garcia, the co-owners, initiated the first expansion of the campus, with the primary building for ages 3-6.

The yellow brick, which is on the facing of the original main building, was painstakingly removed from the old garage and became the face of this building. The classrooms were built with respect to the integrity of the original home. Wooden floors and beaded-board ceilings were installed.

As OPMS continued to expand its student population and enrichment programs, additional classroom space became a necessity. In early 2001, a new building was constructed with custom interior upgrades. Extra care was taken to make sure the exterior of the building blended with the existing buildings and the surroundings of the OPMS campus. It was completed in September 2001, and is currently occupied by the lower and upper elementary students. It was at this time that Todd Garcia joined the school, eventually becoming co-owner in 2007.

We have taken every step to provide a beautiful environment at Old Peachtree Montessori, in line with Maria Montessori's vision of Casa dei Bambini. We have invested in an environment for your child that is rich in character and history, in order that we may nurture and educate the leaders of tomorrow.

 

In 1919, Jackson Longstreet Sims and his wife, Sallie Ambrose Sims, built the house in which our school now resides. The Sims' are the great-great grandparents of David, Daniel, and Mary Katherine Crooke, former students of Old Peachtree Montessori. J.L. Sims was a successful farmer and businessman and the property was part of several large farms that Sims owned and operated. The lumber for the house and floors was harvested from a lumber farm owned by Mr. Sims.

The yellow brick was purchased in Cincinnati, Ohio for five cents per brick. Older local residents and friends of the Sims' refer to the house as the "The Yellow Brick House." The house had hot and cold running water, as well as two indoor bathrooms, which was considered extravagant in 1919! The hand- painted Italian ceramic tiles, located in three rooms in the house were purchased at the Merchandise Mart in Chicago. The original roof was tin, and the green terra cotta roof was added in the 1920s. Mr. Sims moved the original tin roof to the Elisha Winn house on Dacula Road, which he also owned. The Sims family later sold the Elisha Winn house to the Gwinnett Historic Society.

The sinks in the house are the right height for children because Sallie Sims was only four feet-eleven inches tall. The kitchen is in its original form, using pieces of furniture to store utensils rather than cabinets. The back porch, originally a screened porch, was used for some food storage and a back entrance to the house.

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