How the Wade Park CEC Came to Be
Built in 1914-1915 by most accounts, 11310 Wade Park Avenue was deigned by Cleveland firm . Architect Hermann Dercum is best known for creating the ornamental iron gate for Cleveland's ; the at 1213 West 3rd Street in Cleveland; and the on West Boulevard. Dercum's firm designed stately, Craftsman-style homes, and Wade Park offered an ideal setting. The was envisioned by developers as Cleveland's first "garden suburb." Streets christened Bellflower, Hazel, Juniper, and Magnolia, criss-cross the campus of °Ç¸çºÚÁÏ as part of the neighborhood.
The first occupants were newlyweds Irving H. Putnam (an entrepreneur who founded an industrial parts company), and Ruth Bradford Putnam (a descendant of the family of early Cleveland settlers. They lived there for more than half a century.
In 1917, the Putnams sold the home to Hungarian immigrant Moris Wuliger, owner of the fledgling company Ohio Mattress. He--and later his son Frank--made this address their home for the next 27 years: through the company's 1924 purchase of a license to manufacture beds under the Sealy name; through the retirement of Moris and and leadership of Frank; and through the rapid growth in 1939, when Frank called his son Ernest home from college to help run the booming business. Ernest led the company for 40 years until the company was sold in 1989.
In the 1950s, the home became the residence and laboratory of Carl Schugt, a former employee of General Electric at . With his wife Louise as his bookkeeper, Carl launched Euclid Glass Engineering Laboratory using his home's basement to transform glass and quartz into scientific instruments for Standard Oil, NASA, and other clients.
After Carl's death, Louise Schugt sold the home to Fellowship Christian Church. Congregants gathered to worship under its roof for 25 years from 1970, until 2015.
°Ç¸çºÚÁÏ purchased the home in 2017, with the long-term goal of eventually transforming the property.
On October 15, 2024, 11310 Wade Park Avenue has been fully-renovated and will continue its tradition of being a place of innovation, family, and community.