City Officers and the Annual Reports to the City Council of Newburyport 1906, Part 14

Author: City of Newburyport
Publication date: 1906
Publisher:
Number of Pages: 314


USA > Massachusetts > Essex County > Newburyport > City Officers and the Annual Reports to the City Council of Newburyport 1906 > Part 14


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6 | Part 7 | Part 8 | Part 9 | Part 10 | Part 11 | Part 12 | Part 13 | Part 14 | Part 15


On October 29th, the resignation of the truant officer, Mr. Robert G. Allen was received and accepted. The fol- lowing resolution relating to Mr. Allen's work was offered and unanimously adopted by the Committee at the meeting held November 9th; "That in accepting the resignation of Truant Officer Robert G. Allen, the School Board of the City of Newburyport hereby express its appreciation of the tact, energy and faithfulness with which the official duties of the position have been performed by him."


Mr. Joshua L. Chase was elected on November 9th to succeed Mr. Allen. Mr. Chase began his duties on the 12th of the same month.


I wish to express my sincere appreciation of the cordial relations which have existed between this Committee and myself, since assuming the duties of my office on the first of September ; for the many courtesies which have been accord- ed me, and for the support of my plans in every way.


To the teachers also, I would express my gratitude for the help which they have been to me, in acquainting me with the details of much of my work.


Lastly, I cannot forget the valuable assistance which has


33


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


been given me by my predecessor in office. It seldom falls to the lot of one in this work to receive such assistance, and it is gratefully acknowledged.


Respectfully submitted, EDGAR L. WILLARD,


December 31, 1906. Superintendent of Schools.


REPORT OF THE PRINCIPAL OF THE HIGH SCHOOL.


Mr. Edgar L. Willard, Supt. of Schools, Newburyport Mass.,


Dear Sir :- In reviewing the work of the past year no radical change in any department is to be noted. The year has been one of quiet progress. It has been the aim, using the means at our command, to steadily increase the efficiency of the school and make it serve, as fully as possible, the future welfare of the community.


To give definiteness of aim to certain of our pupils a course for preparation for the Normal or Training Schools was outlined. It was found that many were selecting their studies as fancy directed, without any reference to what they might wish to do later. The result has been to lead the girls, in their earlier years in the school, to consider more care- fully what studies they will take, it has also increased their estimate of the value of these studies. This influence was very noticeable at the opening of the school year.


In out commercial department there are seventy-three (73) taking Book-keeping, forty-one (41) taking Phono- graphy, forty (40) taking Typewriting and fourteen (14) tak- ing Commercial Law. All this work is looked after by one teacher. The work in typewriting, of necessity, is done by


34


35


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


the pupils in a room where no teacher is present to instruct or supervise. Under such conditions we cannot hope for that efficiency we desire. The other teachers are called upon to take the Commercial Arithmetic and business correspon- dence. The needs of this department are urgent. There should be an assistant teacher to take care of the typewriting and relieve the other teachers of the distinctly commercial work. In this way only can proper regard for and enthu- siasm in the work be secured.


It is evident that the success of any school depends more largely upon the selection of good teachers than upon any other feature of administration. In addition to the pro- fessional requirements which are increasing each year, must be added that personality which attracts and inspires the pu- · pil to his very best. True teaching comes in contact with and developes all sides of life.


Last June, Miss Sarah A. Leonard resigned her position in the school. The completion of a term of service of twenty years is an event of unusual interest. During all those years Miss Leonard exemplified to her pupils an ideal standard of purpose and effort. To an unusual degree she held the respect, confidence and affection of those who knew her as teacher or friend. This feeling found expression in a substantial sum of money contributed by former pupils and friends.


The vacancy caused by Miss Leonard's resignation was filled by the election of Mr. Charles Irving Peabody, a grad- uate of Amherst. Mr. Peabody had had one year's experi- ence in an Academy in New York State and came to us highly recommended.


36


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


This year the lunch counter is managed by a committee of the Woman's Club. The food served has been most ex- cellent and the prices very reasonable. The ladies in charge are laboring hard to make it a success and the teachers and pupils are very grateful for the service rendered.


Under the direction of Mr. George H. Pearson, the school chorus assisted by soloists, gave the Cantata Ruth be- fore a large audience in City Hall. This was the first at- tempt of anything of the kind by the school. The work of the chorus and director justly received great praise.


The preparation for such a concert gave zest to the music class with the result that better work was accomplished than usual. For the pupils to have a part in rendering music of such soloists has a powerful influence in cultivating a taste for that which is best.


Mr. Paul A. Merrill gave to the school thirty ($30.00) dolars, to be used for prizes in declamation and recitation. The scholars became interested at once and eighteen con- tested for the prize. The judges at the final contest were Rev. H. E. Lombard of So. Byfield; Prin. Forrest Brown, High School, Amesbury, and Prin. Charles W. Cutts, High School, Merrimac. The boys and girls competed separately.


Prizes were awarded as follows: Boys, the first, ten dollars to Sam Sargent; the second, five dollars, to Boyd N. Jones. Girls, the first, ten dollars, to Ethel A. Arens; the second, five dollars, to Katherine E. Barrett.


Mr. Merrill repeated his offer for the current year.


The Ladies of G. A. R. presented the school with a beautiful flag. A large delegation of the ladies visited the school and presented the flag in connection with the exer-


37


SCHOOL COMMITTEE .


cises of Patriots Day. The gift was very timely and is ap- preciated for itself but more because of the interest in the school, which it bespeaks.


On June 26th a class of forty-seven was graduated. The School Board conferred 36 diplomas and the Putnam Trus- tees II.


The admission to college from our school this year is as follows : Massachusetts Institute of Technology 3, Brown University 2, Harvard I, Worcester Polytechnic Institute I, N. H. State College I, Smith College 2 and Boston Uni- versity I. Three entered the Salem Normal, five the training and one a training school in Boston.


The Toppan prize was awarded to Frederick H. Stover. The committee of award consisted of Mr. Grosvenor T. Blood and Rev. George P. Merrill. The prize was awarded for the best written examination in civil government.


At the opening of school in September one hundred and thirteen were admitted from the grammar schools. Seventy- seven were admitted upon the recommendation of their former teachers and thirty-six upon examination.


Respectfully submitted,


WALTER E. ANDREWS, Prin.


38


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


NUMBER OF PUPILS


PURSUING THE SEVERAL BRANCHES OF STUDY IN THE HIGH SCHOOL, DECEMBER, 1906


Subjects


First Year


Second Year


Third Year


Fourth Year


Total


English


II6


77


74


38


305


Latin


58


45


14


12


129


Greek


0


0


3


7


IO


French


60


46


50


24


180


German


0


0


25


5


30


Algebra


I20


8


20


IO


158


Geometry


O


46


25


0


71


Commercial Arithmetic


51


0


0


O


51


Book-keeping


O


45


28


0


73


Physical Georgraphy


O


0


0


25


25


Physics


O


44


20


0


64


Chemistry


0


0


24


0


24


Civil Government


O


0


0


30


30


History


71


I9


27


30


147


Stenography


0


0


29


12


41


Typewriting


0


0


23


17


40


Botany


O


23


0


0


23


Physiology


0


0


0


I3


13


Membership


City


Putnam


Total


Fourth Class


106


II


II7


Third Class


63


15


78


Second Class


48


18


66


First Class


32


12


44


2


I


3


-


-


-


251


57


308


39


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


AVERAGE AGE.


Fourth Class


.14 yr. 7 mo.


14 yr. 3 mo


First Class


15 yr. 6 mo.


16 yr.


Second Class


.17 yr. I md.


15 yr. 10 mo.


First Class


.17 yr. 6 mo.


17 yr. 5 mo.


GRADUATES, CLASS OF 1906.


HIGH SCHOOL.


Ethel Atkinson Arens


Carolyn Gray Bradbury


Josephine Kimball Brown Bertha Mae Burke


Frederic Karl Castelhun Elizabeth May Davis Beulah Evans


Marion Langlands Gould Annie Elizabeth Hadden


Charles Everett Grover


Maude Heywood


Alfred Lewis Jaques


Fanny Olena Johansen


Esther Teresa Kelley


Alice Frances Lunt


Eliza Margaret McKinney Laura Keziah Pettingell Paul Simpson


Patrick Joseph O'Connell Edith Noyes Robinson


Frederick Haskell Stover.


William Joseph Sweeney


Katherine Tracy Walsh Katherine Warren Whitmore


PUTNAM SCHOOL.


Daisy Iolo Barrett


Dalton Boynton


Carrie Frances Coffin


Marion Anetta Corey


Marion Izette Fogg


Clara Frances Managhan


Bertha Amanda Stickney


Flossie Louise Vennard


40


Harlan Merrill Eaton Margaret Bradley Little


Arthur Reginald Nield


Katherine Estelle Barrett Annie Laurie Brown


Alice Gertrude Buckley


John Joseph Carens Rosalie Eggers Chase Anna Loretto Doyle


Laura Fisher Legate Lucy Balch Morse


Katherine Reed Sullivan Elsie Wilma Thurlow Walter James Walsh


Guy Reynolds Hicken


GRADUATION EXERCISES CLASS OF 1906 N. H. & P. F. S.


PROGRAM.


MARCH-"Priest March" . From Mendelssohn'h Athalie William J. Jordan, Jr.


PRAYER


Rev. L. C. Greeley.


MUSIC-"Heaven and the Earth Display" From Mendelssohn's Athalie School Chorus.


ESSAY (Salutatory Rank)-A Roman Day


Lucy Balch Morse. DECLAMATION-"Opportunities of the Scholar" Henry W. Grady


Alfred Lewis Jaques.


PROPHECY


Ethel Atkinson Arens.


MUSIC-"A Day on the Water" Veazie


School Chorus.


ESSAY-Joan of Arc Esther Teressa Kelley.


ESSAY-Excused from Writing


Annie Elizabeth Hadden.


41


42


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


DECLAMATION-"The Commonwealth of Massachusetts" ...


William Eustis Russell


William J. Sweeney.


ESSAY-The First Crusade


Katherine Estelle Barrett.


MUSIC-"The Wreck of the Hesperus"


.Anderton School Chorus.


ESSAY-The Knight of the Round Table, with Valedictory. ... Laura Keziah Pettingell. AWARD OF TOPPAN PRIZE


Rev. George P. Merrill, Grosvenor T. Blood, Committee of Award. PRESENTATION OF DIPLOMAS. CLASS ODE.


WORDS BY ELIZA M. MCKINNEY .- (MUSIC, FAIR HARVARD.)


Dear classmates, we stand on the threshold of life,


Divided, the world we must roam,


And the school that has sheltered us safe in the past Shall in memory cling till the last.


The gladsome hours of schooldays are gone, And now comes our farewell song;


"Deeds, not words" is the motto we take for a guide, As we're borne o'er the restless tide.


For tomorrow we'll follow a far different course From the one we have traveled so long,


Let us try to perform our new tasks with a zeal And a will everybody shall feel.


We all love to look on the years that are past With a heart full of love and regret, And the old recollections, so active today, Will be with us, come whatever may.


BENEDICTION.


.


43


SCHOOL COMMITTEE .


HONORS IN GENERAL SCHOLARSHIP.


Katherine Estelle Barrett


Annie Elizabeth Hadden


Margaret Bradley Little


Carrie Frances Coffin Esther Teresa Kelley Lucy Balch Morse


Laura Keziah Pettingell


CLASS ADMITTED TO HIGH SCHOOL, JUNE, 1906.


CURRIER SCHOOL.


William E. Coffin


Harold G. Folsom


Hazel E. Milliken


Mary S. Merrill


Scott L. Perry


Jennie L. Pearson Frank S. Somerby


Ethelyn M. Weare ADMITTED, BUT NOT ATTTENDING.


Roy W. Chrisenton


May C. Hawley


Raymond W. Richards Estella M. Moore


Roscoe P. Woundy


JACKMAN SCHOOL.


Marion E. Adams


Florence Barrett


Edward R. Bartlett


Bennie Brudno


Mary F. Burbank


Ruth Carens


Pauline Cashman


Henry Donahue


Mabeth E. Downer


Malcolm Goodwin


Edward Doyle


Jere Lessard


Emma Hughes


E. M. Macdonald


Marion D. Lovett


John Macintosh


44


Howard L. Ross


Joseph H. Currier


Louis E. Kendrick


45


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


JACKMAN SCHOOL (Concluded.)


Ed. M. Macintosh


Caroline F. Pettengill


Belle N. Parker


Wilhelmina Plumer


James Pettingell Daniel Quill


Lois E. Russell


John Sullivan


Mildred Stevens


Arthur Tilton


Adelaide Thurlow


George Welch


Alice Titcomb


Irving Winder


Grace Welch


Everett Wheeler


Esther Woodman


ADMITTED, BUT NOT ATTENDING.


Katherine Coats


Ernest J. Hart


Edith Knapp


Gladys Nelson


Marguerite Russell


Victor Gould


Harry Forbrigger


Elizabeth Coger


Paul Kessler


Charles Thomas


Arthur Pearson


Elmer Walton


Russel Littlefield


Howland Stanwood Gladys Blake Ruth Sunman


Harriett Donahue


Florence Sheehan


Elsie Nicklas


KELLEY SCHOOL.


Marguerite L. Balch


Claude H. Wright


Edgar W. Chase


Gerald L. Bradtord


Margaret C. Donovan


Marion E. Colman


Agnes C. Doyle


L. Elizabeth Duggan George P. Elliott Ruth A. Haigh J. Edward Hardy Shirley Hunt


Bessie B. Garland


Ethel L. Hart


Ethel M. Kimball Clara S. Lord


46


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


KELLEY SCHOOL, (Concluded).


Herbert C. Little


Alice M. Lyons


Dorothy E. Sayward


James J. Tattersall


Matthew A. Twomey


Chauncey Worcester


ADMITTED, BUT NOT ATTENDING.


Lawrence E. Binley


Hazel M. Bowden


Edith F. Manson


Zelma M. Rines.


Lillian E. McLean


Ella M. Hale


Hazel C. Ryan


Harry J. Milner


Lenora E. Sullivan


Sadie Martell


Sarah L. Saklad


John J. Sullivan


Gladys F. Whitney


Ruth G. Sullivan


M. Clement Duggan


REPORT OF THE SUPERVISOR OF THE TRAINING SCHOOL.


"O'er wayward children wouldst thou hold firm sway, And sun thee in the light of happy faces; Love, hope and patience, these must be thy graces, And in thine own heart let them first keep school." --- Coleridge.


To the Superintendent of Schools :-


This spirit of love is the true spirit of the primary school and is the one that permeates our city Training School.


Here we find harmony among the children, the pupil teachers and their principal and all working with one idea. the advancement and improvement of the individual and through him the school as a whole. With this end in view child study is made an important element in the course.


The school has always held a high place in the public esteem and no doubt owes much of its success to the hearty co-operation and help which it has universally received from the parents.


In September, 1906, the school completed its seventeenth year of existence and has graduated during that time one


47


·


48


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


hundred and sixteen pupil teachers, seventy-four of whom were from our own city.


These graduates have no difficulty in obtaining positions and do work to the satisfaction of those in authority in larger cities to which many of them have gone.


Of the five young ladies who were graduated this year two have had an advance in their salaries since the opening of the school year. This is the most positive proof that their work is appreciated.


There are many changes that would improve the school. chief among which would be more room. At present classes are obliged to recite in the hall and the dressing rooms which are both poorly adapted to the work.


The school at present consists of thirteen pupil teachers and one hundred and ninety children.


SENIOR CLASS.


Ruth Brown Newburyport


Annie Dixon


Lillian Ordway 66


Ella Robinson


Elizabeth Roaf


MIDDLE CLASS.


Lulu Colby Haverhill


Frances Cotter . Rowley


· Mary Fernald Amesbury


Emma Jewett Ipswich


49


· SCHOOL COMMITTEE


JUNIOR CLASS.


Caroline Bradbury Newburyport


Bessie Davis


Annie Doyle 66


Beulah Evans


66


FRANCES WARD RICHARDS, December 1, 1906. Supervisor.


REPORT OF THE SUPERVISOR OF DRAWING.


To E. L. Willard, Supt. of Schools :


The work in drawing for the past term has been car- ried on according to the plans of the regular supervisor.


The schools are doing creditable work. The eighth and ninth grades in the Currier School excel in nature drawing. The ninth grade in the Kelley School has made rapid pro- gress in the use of water colors. The Moultonville School deserves especial mention for courteous attention, effort and good results.


The freehand classes at the High School are doing satisfactory work. The mechanical classes are for students preparing for the Institute of Technology.


As drawing is not ranked a record of each student's work is not kept. But in attentive classes, good results are sure to follow.


Respectfully submitted, LUCILE GRAVESTEIN, (Acting) Supervisor of Drawing.


December 1, 1906.


50


REPORT OF THE SUPERVISOR OF MUSIC.


To the Superintendent of Schools :-


Since Decembger Ist, 1905, I have been able to carry on my work in the schools without interruption.


Grade work is much the same from year to year. Work- ing schedules are provided the teachers each month, in an effort to have the training regular, systematic and, as nearly as possible, the same in all classes of the same grade.


It has often occurred to .me that, if pupils were marked in music, as in other studies, it might be in many instances. an incentive to do better work.


Weekly lessons are given in the High School. There is a growing interest and marked improvement in this branch. In making selections for the High School, I en- deavor to choose those which will be pleasing to the student and at the same time cultivate an appreciation for the best class of music.


In February, with the assistance of Boston soloists, the cantata "Ruth" was very successfully given, under the able direction of Mr. George H. Pearson, who had begun the work during my leave of absence.


Music for the graduating exercises included two four-


5I


52


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


part songs by Mendelssohn and Veazie, and the cantata "The Wreck of the Hesperus," Atherton, the solo parts be- ing taken by members of the chorus.


In general, the results have been more encouraging than usual, and I would express my appreciation to teachers and superintendents, past and present, for their co-operation in carrying on the work.


espectfully submitted,


ELIZABETH C. ADAMS, Supervisor of Music. December 1, 1906.


DOMESTIC SCIENCE.


Mr. E. L. Willard, Superintendent of Schools :


Dear Sir :- The lessons in Domestic Science have been given in the Purchase Street Building and in the Ashland Street Ward Room.


The girls from the eighth grade, fifty-nine in number are instructed in cooking and all seem interested in their work.


Reports are given each week showing the result of home practice, and parents are constantly signifying their gratification that this branch has been introduced into the work of the public schools.


The curriculum for these classes includes the study of food materials, their classification, composition and nutritive value, relation of food to the body, digestion and assimilation, preparation of foods, fundamental principles and processes of cookery, study of fuels and cooking apparatus.


These lessons are carefully prepared and so arranged that the students may have as thorough and practical a knowledge of plain cooking as it is possible to give in a course of thirty lessons.


There have been one hundred and eighty-eight pupils


53


54


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


in the sixth and seventh grades who have received instruc- tion in needle work.


As the time is limited, only the most practical stitches are attempted as basting, stitching, overhanding, hemming, over-casting button holes, patching, dress and stocking darning, with the cutting and making of aprons, pillow-cases, bags and underskirts.


Such courses as these tend to train the eye and hand and to cultivate the habit of industry.


The educational advantages are manifested in the grad- ual development of self-reliance and good judgment in pupils who lack confidence, and a corresponding improvement in those who are naturally progressive.


The teacher and pupils wish to express their gratitude for the gas stove and chest of drawers recently added to the school equipment. They were much needed and are of much assistance in the work.


If allowable at the end of this report I would like to give a word of commendation to our janitor who has so faithfully cared for our room for the last two years. Previous to his having charge the classes were often dismissed because the room was not properly heated. The water pipes were con- stantly bursting and for three months the water supply was shut off both up stairs and in the toilet rooms as it seemed impossible to keep it running. During the last two winters the room has been perfectly comfortable and no plumber has been employed.


Respectfully submitted, SARAH A. CHASE,


Supervisor of Domestic Science.


December 1, 1906.


ROLL OF HONOR.


Perfect in Attendance for the Entire Year.


HIGH SCHOOL.


Margaret Atwood


Albert Bradbury


Louis L. Crocker


George Currier


George Leavitt


Edward R. Ayers, Jr.


Albert C. Brown


J. Willis Currier Helen Fernald


Helen B. Rodigrass


Sarah E. Stover


GRAMMAR SCHOOLS.


Emma Beaton


Mary Carlin


Thomas Cashman


George F. offin ,


Laura Dow


Marion James


Harold Little 1.


Josephine Magowan


Theresa Mahoney


Sadie Martel .


Helena Moynihan


Alice Murphy


Leslie Noyes ,


Everett Page


Scott L. Perry


May Potter


Daniel Quill


Everett Stevens


Frank Welch


55


56


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


PRIMARY SCHOOLS.


Jessie Felch


Albert Fowler


Rachel Hunter


Elizabeth O'Connor


Minnie Partlow


Edmund W. Steer


Cora Welch


Sarkis Yeretzian


Perfect in Attendance for Two Terms.


HIGH SCHOOL.


Marion Bayley


Olive Benson


Carolyn G. Brad bury


Lawrence A. Brown


Frederic Condon


Roland Currier


Marion L. Gould


Leslie L. Hendrick


Norris C. Ingalls


Henry Johnson


Susie Jones


Dennis F. Kelleher


Willard S. Little


Winthrop Little


George H. Murley


Arthur J. Murphy


Arthur R. Nield


Walter R. Noyes


Katherine O'Connell


John M. Pettingell


H. Gertrude Philbrick Arthur Quill


Ruth C. Pike


Elsie M. Reiman


Frederick Stover


GRAMMAR SCHOOLS.


Edward R. Bartlett


Charlotte Bayley


Hazel B. Beaton


Gladys R. Blake


Ernest Boyd


Gerald Bradford


Alfred Bradshaw


Florence Bradshaw


Elizabeth Carter


Milliam E. Coffin


Esther Crocker


Climena Currier


Joseph H. Currier


Ruth H. Currier


Warren Drew


Beatrice Fisher


57


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


GRAMMAR SCHOOLS, (Concluded.


Ruth Flanders


William Heywood


Ployer P. Hill


Margaret Hunter


Henry James


Everett Johnson


Arthur Knight


Esther Lord


Alice Lyons


Bertha Mckinney


Craig Moody


Gladys B. Nelson


Austin Noyes


Leslie Noyes


Walter Noyes


Ernest Nutting


Robert O'Connell


William O'Connell


Arthur E. Steer


George White


Bertha S. Wilson


Irving T. Winsor


PRIMARY SCHOOLS.


Joseph Arakelian Avery Currier


Rolino Dow Gladys V. Klock John Moynihan Agnes Murphy Henry Sullivan


Lucy E. Chauncey


Kathleen Donovan


Russell Gifford


Humphrey Lynch


Joseph Moynihan


Beatrice Potter May Twomey


Esther Yeretzian


HIGH SCHOOL.


Perfect Attendance for One Term.


Ralph L. Bartlett


Susie E. Bartlett


Lena M. Brown


Martha R. Batchelder John S. Bryant Marguerite Burns Winthrop Caldwell Agnes E. Cashman Dorothea Castelhun Elizabeth H. Coffin


Frederick Coffin Charles F. Cole


58


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


HIGH SCHOOL (Concluded.)


Daniel F. Condon


Minerva W. Dow


Arthur B. Flint


Harold R. Fowler


Hazel Fowler


Earl Gagnon


Maude Heywood


Bertha F. Houston


Alfred L. Jaques


Rudolph Jacoby, Jr


Fannie Johansen


Boyd N. Jones


Katherine C. Langlands


Edith P. Leigh


Harry Lewis


Ruth V. Maddock


Edward W. Mannix


Eugene A. Moynihan


Paul Otis


Mabel L. Page


Arthur S. Page


Leon W. Parsons


Mildred D. Pearson


Joanna C. Ryan


Clarence R. Reiman


Michael Simon


Helen E. Somerby


Marion H. Spalding


Russell J. Stevens


Bertha Stickney


William Sweeney


Alice Taylor


Sarah E. Thompson


Laura Williams


GRAMMAR SCHOOLS.


Marion E. Adams


Herman Allen


Charles Atkinson


Carrie Barton


Ida M. Blaisdell


Marguerite Bradbury


Frank K. Bradford ·


Herbert Bryant


Raymond Burbank


Viola ® Caldwell


Ethel Carson Laura Chauncey


Norwell Carter


Anna Collins


Joseph Coffill Sarah Cook


Nellie Creedon


Warren Crocker


Miriam Delano Ella Dow


Frank Dineen


George Dow


59


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


GRAMMAR SCHOOLS, (Concluded.)


Edward Doyle


Ernest Elliott


Miriam Elliott


Marion Felch


Clarence Fogg


Jule Gagnon


Charles Gardiner


Malcom Goodwin


Victor Gould


Ella B. C. Greeley


Gertrude M. Grover


Ella Hale


Helen Hayes


Margaret Hughes


George Hunter


Charles Johnson


Nicvholas Johnson


Leo Kane


Alice Lord


Fred Lessard


Elizabeth M. Maconald


Lilla McKinnon


Pearl McQuillin


Everett Merrill


Hazel E. Millikin


John Nelson


Rupert Noyes


Teresa O'Connor


Ethel E. Page


Arthur Pearson


Lavinia J. Pearson


Estella Reiman


Clifford Ronan


Dana Ross


Howard L. Koss


Florence Ryan


Violet Sias


Lester Small


Leonard M. Spalding Philip Steer


Clara Stover


Daniel Sullivan


John J. Sullivan


Charles H. Thomas


Arthur Tilton


Helen White


Ralph White


Roscoe P. Woundy


PRIMARY SCHOOLS.,


Elizabeth Adams Marjorie Balch


Meshac Arslanian


Ercell C. Banks


Faustina Smith


Raymond Somerby


John Stanton


60


SCHOOL COMMITTEE


PRIMARY SCHOOLS, (Concluded.)


Arthur Barth


Charles Blake


Carrie Boyd


Stanley Boyd


Loren Braddock


Helen Brooks


Fred Carlson


Henry Chase


Lloyd Chesley


Elizabeth Collins


Raymond Davis


Evelyn Dixon


Gertrude Duffy


Henry Duggan


Alfred Ericson


Elizabeth Felch


Marion Feilding


Rosanna Gelinas


Flora Gonette


Marion Graham


Rachael Heywood Raymond Hughes


Roy B. Ireland


Harold Jones


Evelyn Kelley


Charles Kelso


Joseph Kendall


Marion Knight


Fred Knowles


Edna Lane


Merville Langley


Maria Lavoie


Veronica Lucy


Thomas Lyons


George Maloney


Ernest Merrill


George Merrill


Irene Murphy


Sadie Nemser


Anita Noyes


Norman Noyes


Daniel O'Connor


Abbie N. O'Connor


Bessie Phillips


Mildred Phillips


Hazel Phinney


Frank Pike


Arthur Pottle


Harriet A. Ray


Medor Raymond


Grace Richards


Helen Sheehan


Walter B. Somerby


Charlotte Squires


Harold Stevens


Lawrence Stevens


Thomas Sullivan




Need help finding more records? Try our genealogical records directory which has more than 1 million sources to help you more easily locate the available records.