The former Frank C. Frisbee Elementary School in Kittery, York County was listed in the National Register of Historic Places at the local level of significance under Criterion A, Military, as a building funded and constructed under the War Public Works Project (Project # ME 17-105F), and for its association with the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. It is significant under Criterion A, Community Planning and Development, for its association with Admiralty Village, a federally funded, federally constructed residential neighborhood built to house enlisted married men and civilian workers and their families from the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard. Frisbee School was constructed at the same time as Admiralty Village, to meet the needs of these military families. It is also significant under Criterion A, Education, for its construction of a new school as a direct response to the influx of naval families with children moving to Kittery and for its response to federal educational standards required by the U. S. Department of Defense. It is significant under Criterion C, Architecture, as a noteworthy local example of mid-twentieth century Colonial Revival design and construction. Designed by the New Hampshire architectural firm of Wells, Hudson and Granger, the 1941 building retains integrity of location, design, setting, material, workmanship, feeling and association. The addition, known as ?the Annex,? was added to the building in 1951 to expand the capacity of the school to accommodate the continued expansion of the Shipyard?s activities under the nuclear submarine program of the Cold War. This addition is a contributing element to the historic building, retaining integrity of location, design, setting, material, workmanship, feeling and association. The period of significance is 1941-1951, the period in which the school was constructed and expanded and gained significance in the area of military activity, community planning, education and architecture in the town of Kittery, Maine.