City of Melrose annual report 1907, Part 4

Author: Melrose (Mass.)
Publication date: 1907
Publisher:
Number of Pages: 420


USA > Massachusetts > Middlesex County > Melrose > City of Melrose annual report 1907 > Part 4


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IV. The regular annual increase in all grades is $50.


The basal principle of the above plan is the idea of making promotion to the highest salary depend in part, at least, upon progressive scholarship. The merit of this idea has been sufficiently established in connection with our grade salaries to warrant extending its use, in my judgment, to the regulation of the salaries of the teachers in our high school.


Speaking of the necessity of professional growth on the part of teachers and in defence of the idea of making salary dependent in part upon evidence of progressive scholarship supplied by promotional tests, Superinten- dent Cooley of Chicago says : "Older heads are not always better teachers, and length of service often means a decrease in efficiency. The teacher in a good school maintains her efficiency for four or five years without study, perhaps, but before the end of the first decade her decline begins. She can not remain efficient unless she is a student."


3. In addition to the effort put forth through general meet-


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CITY OF MELROSE


ings and in organized class work as indicated above, I have endeavored, through regular conferences with the principals, through special meetings with teachers of different grades, and through conferences with individ- ual teachers and with supervisors of special subjects, not only to promote the better working of the adminis- trative features of the system but also to develop] a keener professional spirit in the corps.


Additional School Accommodations-For the past three years there has been pressing need for additional school rooms and the Committee has repeatedly called attention to this need. In the annual report for 1906, I expressed the convic- tion that, although two different propositions to secure the needed relief had been defeated in a referendum vote by the citizens, these adverse expressions were due primarily to fail- ure on the part of the people to understand the situation fairly. During the past year, the Committee renewed the proposition to enlarge the present high school building. When it became certain that the proposition must again go to a referendum vote, action was taken by direction of the Committee to in- form the citizens thoroughly regarding the matter and, as a result, it was determined by a decisive vote to expend $75,000 to make the proposed enlargement.


There is little doubt that with a view to economy as well as efficiency in administration of the schools, the above decision was thoroughly wise.


The plan of enlargement contemplates the addition of two wings to the present structure extending to the eastward and will provide sufficient additional rooms to accommodate both the high school and the ninth grades for approximately ten years, it is thought.


Special Rooms for Defective and Incorrigible Children .- I am convinced that one great source of waste in the administration of schools is the presence in the regular classes of pupils who are not amenable to the ordinary discipline of the schools and of those who are mentally unable to keep pace with the regular class work. Both classes of pupils are to be found in every


61


SCHOOL REPORT


school system and, in the interest of the schools as a whole, such pupils ought to be segregated in special rooms under the charge of teachers who are peculiarly qualified to direct and assist them and where, therefore, they may receive that train- ing which they need to promote their best development.


As the result of an investigation as to the number of pupils of these two classes who are now in our schools, I am led to suggest that the Committee consider the necessity and advisa- bility of action to meet the needs of the schoolsin this direction.


In a lengthy report to the Board of Education of the city of St. Louis, Nov. 12, 1907, upon the subject of special schools for defectives, the Superintendent of Schools says :- " The pres- ent practice by which children of this class are sent to the or- dinary school where they are placed in crowded rooms not adapted in any way to their needs is an unbearable wrong both towards the afflicted children and towards the others. The presence of one such child in a room is, in a measure, a draw- back to every other child whose progress is impeded by the necessary sacrifice of time and patience on the part of the teacher. For the defective child himself, there is no chance of proper progress commensurate with its feeble powers, in com- petition with 50 or 60 normal children. Nature puts the de- fective child in a class by himself and education should take Nature's hint. The establishment of special schools is dic- tated by every humane and educational consideration."


If it shall seem wise to the Committee to consider this subject further, I shall be pleased at the proper time to submit a fuller discussion of the necessity of special rooms for the purpose in- dicated and also of the method of their administration.


Vacation Schools. The Chairman of the Educational Com- mittee of the Melrose Woman's Club has kindly placed in my hands the following statement regarding the work of the vaca- . tion schools which the club maintained during the past sum- mer.


Melrose Highlands, March 7, 1908. Mr. F. H. Nickerson, Superintendent of Schools.


Dear Sir : - In response to your request for an outline of


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CITY OF MELROSE


the work done in the vacation school last summer I submit the following.


The school opened July Sth and closed August 16th. About three hundred pupils registered. The attendance fluctuated the first week as it always does. Later the attendance was quite regular. The departments this year were school gar- dens, dressmaking, cooking, chairseating, basketry and kindergarten work. School gardens and dressmaking were our new and important features, both proving very successful. There were three classes a week in dressmaking, with an aver- age attendance of twenty-one a day.


The school gardens were a source of pleasure and profit to about seventy boys. Some of the more successful ones ex- hibited their produce at the Massachusetts Horticultural Ex- hibit and were awarded third prize.


The department that is of untold help and benefit to the boys and girls (though more especially to the boys) is the chairseating. Last spring, while purchasing some things for the vacation school, I came across a small boy seating a chair and made the remark that he had done it very well. I asked him where he had learned to do it. His reply was " In the . vacation school last summer. I have made about thirty dollars seating chairs since last summer." This may have been a little exaggeration on his part but I tell the tale as it was told to me. Anyway it went to show that the vacation school had helped one boy very materially and perhaps laid a possible foundation for future business.


The vacation school has come to stay and I hope to see it more closely identified with the public schools.


Sincerely,


EMILY FRENCH, Chairman.


In my report for 1906 I expressed the hope that this line of educational activity which has been maintained for several . summers at the expense of the Club might become more closely identified with the public school system. Time and additional observation have strengthened my conviction that the Com- mittee would act wisely in asking for an appropriation suf- ficient to maintain a school of the proper nature at public ex-


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SCHOOL REPORT


pense during five or six weeks of the long summer vacation. This is not the time to argue the proposition in detail, but it seems wise to indicate one or two ways in which such a school may be valuable.


Careful investigation reveals the fact that a large fraction of the pupils who attend our schools remain in the city during the whole or the greater part of the summer vacation. It would be vastly better, morally, physically, and intellectually,I be- lieve, for such boys and girls to have an opportunity for a por- tion of their time during this period to participate in organized educational work, than it is to pass their days in idle amuse- ment much of which is secured from the unsupervised associa- tions of the street.


In my judgment, schools for this purpose may well add to the manual work, which is ordinarily the major part of their programs, more or less instruction in the regular lines of school work. Every year more or less pupils, on account of sickness, neglect of duty, or lack of ability, fail to secure promotion at the regular time. Some of these at considerable expense for private tutors fit themselves during the summer vacation to go on with their classes in September. Others who would be glad to do this are prevented by the inability of their parents to stand the expense for private teachers. A school such as I have indicated maintained during the summer at public ex- pense would provide opportunity for all such pupils to make up their deficiencies and thereby prevent them from losing a year's time in repeating their work in grade.


Again, there are more or less pupils in any community whose home conditions are such that they must leave school and be- come wage earners as early as the law will permit. A properly organized vacation school would afford opportunity for such pupils to advance in their studies further than they otherwise could in the time that it is possible for them to remain in school.


Without further discussion at the present time, I trust that it may seem best to the Committee to take under considera- tion the advisability of establishing a vacation schcol as part of the school system of the city. To my mind it does not seem good public policy to permit a costly educational plant to lie


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CITY OF MELROSE


idle so long as we do in summer when it might be employed in valuable and needed educational work.


Changes in the School Committee .- More than the usual num- ber of changes have taken place during the year in the member- ship of the Committee. Mrs. Mary P. Holden, one of the most useful and earnest workers upon the board, passed away on the 22nd of April, 1907, after a lingering illness.


Mrs. Holden had an intelligent conception of the needs of the schools and gave freely of her time and energy to the work. Her loss has been keenly felt by her associates.


At a joint meeting of the Board of Aldermen and the School Committee, George E. Cornwall was chosen to fill the vacancy caused by Mrs. Holden's death for the balance of that year.


William D. Stewart and Charles A. Castle, whose terms ex- pired with January, 1908, declined to be candidates for re- election ; and Eben F. Phillps and George E. Cornwall were elected to those vacancies.


Frank L. Welt of Malvern street was elected to fill the un- expired year of Mrs. Holden's term.


Mr. Stewart had served Melrose for fifteen years as member of its School Committee, during nine years of which he had been Chairman of the Board. Not only had his service been long, but his deep interest in the schools and his comprehensive grasp of all that made for their welfare rendered that service of rare value. In recording my personal regret that he has felt compelled to retire from the work which he loved so much and for which he was so well fitted, I feel certain that I express the sentiment of all who have been his fellow workers on the Committee.


In recognition of his service, the Committee adopted the following resolutions, an engrossed copy of which was sent to Mr. Stewart :


Whereas,- William D. Stewart has chosen to retire from the School Committee of Melrose after a service of fifteen years, during the last nine of which he has been its Chair- man,


Resolved,- That Melrose is deeply indebted for the sac- rifice of time and energy that he has made during this long period of public service and for the earnestness and


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SCHOOL REPORT


wisdom with which he has labored to raise the standard of public education in the community,


Resolved, further, - That his associates on the Committee deeply regret his withdrawal from the work, not only be- cause they regard it as a distinct loss to the public school interests of the City, but also because it removes from the Board one who has the personal regard of the members to an unusual degree.


CONCLUSION.


In closing this report, I desire to express my obligation to the members of the Committee individually and collectively for their courtesy and support, and my appreciation of the faithful and efficient services of teachers, supervisors, and all others connected with the department. I am not unmindful also of the fact that no small part of whatever success has at- tended the administration of the schools during the year is due to a citizenship that, as a whole, is thoroughly loyal to its schools.


Respectfully submitted, FRED H. NICKERSON, Superintendent of Schools.


March 9, 190S.


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CITY OF MELROSE


IN MEMORIAM. CLARA F. LORD, For Two Years a Teacher in the Public Schools in Melrose, Mass. Born in New Bedford, Mass., April 27, 1851. Died in Malden, Mass., December 8, 1907.


Resolutions adopted by the School Committee.


Resolved : That, by the death of Mrs. Clara F. Lord, the public schools of Melrose have lost a most efficient and devoted worker, who had endeared herself, in a marked degree, to her pupils and to her fellow-teachers.


Resolved : That the School Committee of Melrose extends its deep sympathy to the family of Mrs. Lord and hereby ex- presses its appreciation of the noble character, kindly disposi- tion and unremitting interest which were shown in her work throughout her service in Melrose.


DONZELLE E. BENSON,


For One Year and Nine Months a Teacher in the Public Schools in Melrose, Mass. Born in Kennebunkport, Me., November 10, 1874. Died in Melrose, Mass., December 23, 1907.


Resolutions adopted by the School Committee.


Resolved : That the School Committee of Melrose sympa- thizes deeply with the family of Donzelle E. Benson for the great bereavement that has come to them in her death.


Resolved : That Miss Benson's earnest and efficient service in the D. W. Gooch School won for her the approval of the school authorities, the esteem of her pupils, and the warm regard of the parents whose children she served ; and that her passing away is a distinct loss to the public school interests of Melrose.


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SCHOOL REPORT


MARY PARSONS HOLDEN.


For Three Years a Member of the School Committee of Melrose, Mass.


Born in St. Albans, Me., April 28, 1864. Died in Melrose, Mass., April 22, 1907.


Resolutions adopted by the School Committee, May 6, 1907.


Resolved : That, in the death of Mrs. Mary P. Holden, on April 22, 1907, the members of the School Committee have lost a loved co-worker, and the schools a devoted and earn- est champion. Mrs. Holden was honest in her opinions, and, while she had the courage of her convictions, she was, nevertheless, charitable in the consideration of the views of others. Modest and unassuming in her manner, she endeared herself to us all, and we can never forget the kindly smile and companionship we have enjoyed. We wish to express our sympathy with her family and to assure them that we share their sorrow in this affliction.


APPENDIX.


Melrose High School


GRADUATION EXERCISES.


Class of 1907.


City Hall, Evening of June Twenty-Fifth at Eight O'Clock.


PROGRAM.


Invocation REV. JOHN O. PAISLEY.


" The Snow " GIRLS' GLEE CLUB. Violin obligato by SUMNER HYLAND and CHESTER KELLOGG.


Elgar


Salutatory RUTH PIERCE GUILDER.


Essay. "The Humanity of Dickens " ALICE MARGERY SCRIBNER.


" Summer Night " Sprangenberg BOYS' GLEE CLUB.


Oration. " Some Phases of Overcapitalization " ARTHUR HOLMES WHITMAN. Award of Prizes given by the Franklin Fraternity.


" Spring Flowers " GIRLS' GLEE CLUB.


Valedictory


MILDRED JENKS.


Presentation of Diplomas WILLIAM D. STEWART. Chairman of the School Committee.


" Under Blossoming Branches " Zerlett


BOYS' GLEE CLUB.


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SCHOOL REPORT


HONOR LIST.


Alice M. Clifford Ethel M. Foster Hazel Holmes


Class of 1907. Dorothy E. Hodgkins Chester E. Kellogg Marion D. Lewis


M. Louise Sisson.


Mildred Aldrich Edna Baldwin Ralph W. Chadbourn Roy Deferrairi Elliott A. White


Class of 1908.


Esta M. Farwell


Emily C. Gordon


Agnes C. Johnson


9


Charlotte E. Phinney Edith B. Lynde


Class of 1909.


Madeline E. Corse


Alice E. Ford


Elizabeth Thurston


Class of 1910.


Henry R. Aldrich Helen W. Ford Edna Holmes


James L. Lowden Florence I. Merriam Philip H. Stafford


Virginia S. Thompson


Melrose Woman's Club Honors.


Stella W. Jones


Marion D. Lewis


Franklin Fraternity Prizes.


English (Senior Class) Clara B. Franklin English (Junior Class) Grace Harriman English (Third Class) Rose M. Jenkins English (Fourth Class) Helen W. Ford Advanced Geometry Ralph W. Chadbourn Arthur H. Whitman Advanced Algebra Arthur H. Whitman Geometry (Third Class) Madeline M. Corse Algebra (Fourth Class) Ella H. Mellen Florence I. Merriam


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CITY OF MELROSE


Class of 1907.


" Labor Omnia Vincit "*


James Fowler Adams


Blanche Towne Joslin


Harold Whidden Anderson


Chester Elijah Kellogg


Florence Emily Archibald


Amy Elizabeth Kirk Ray Mason Leonard


Watson Freeman Baker, Jr.


Marion Dorothy Lewis


Alice Elizabeth Batchelder


Ralph Albion Loveland Erminie Maria McKay Flora McKeil


Emma Lillian Berry Christina Annie Boyd Mabel Louise Brittian


Denis James Mahoney


Helen May Marshall


Lester Bury Chisholm


Morris Byron Marston


Bertha Frances Churchill


Doris Adelaide Melchert


Blanche Elizabeth Clark


Grace Eudora Murdock


Alice Martha Clifford


John Oscar Norris Lillie Maud O'Brien


Ralph Lee Corey Laurence Coy


Emily Neal Osgood


George Godfrey Dearborn


Walter Irving Pendleton


Katherine Agnes Dwyer


Dora Perkins


Edith Marion Estes


Irene Frances Provandie


Charles Florian Flett


Clara Louise Ricker


Cornelius Alexander Foley


Norman McLaine Scott


Florence Nelson Folsom


Alice Margery Scribner


Ethel Morrison Foster


Helen Augusta Shapleigh


Clara B. Franklin


Mary Louise Sisson


Oma Louise Giles


Charles Fred Sprague Ida Sarah Florence Stamen


Gertrude Sargent Gower


George Henry Guest, Jr.


Vera Elizabeth Stearns


Ruth Pierce Guilder


Annie Emma Stebbins


Mahlon Wallace Hill


John Warren Stevens


James H. Hinchey Joseph Hinchey


Marion Kate Swett


Dorothy Eveline Hodgkins Hazel Holmes


Vaselike Vaitses


Katherine Janet Huskie


Eleanor Wells


Faustina Lander Wells


Arthur Holmes Whitinan


Harold Gould Jenks


William Brigham Whitney


Mildred Jenks


Frank Harrison Wilson Mary Ames Woodward


George Edward Young


Ruth P. Guilder


Alice M. Scribner


PUPILS PROMOTED FROM THE NINTH GRADE TO THE HIGH SCHOOL, JUNE, 1907.


Lincoln School.


Robert Tillinghast Almy, Jr. * Mary Ellen Keiran Hannah Agnes Kennedy


* Ruth Anderton


* Harold Francis Bacall


Regina Elizabeth Kilb


Stella Worth Jones


Arthur Hanscom Stone


Timothy Stephen Vaitses


Sumner Francis Hyland Carl Jenkins


Class Honors. Mildred Jenks


Roy Farrar Atwood


William Kimball Bean


7I


SCHOOL REPORT


* Gertrude May Baldwin


* Otis Willard Bishop


* Dorothy Blake


* John William Lloyd


* Maurice Alexander Lynch


* Gladys MacAdam


* Earle Clayton McAnanny


* Agnes Nora McCarthy


* Elizabeth Jane McIlwraith


Robert William McIlwraith


* John Winslow McLetchie


* Mary Ethel Moore


* Bessie Wilbur Munro Joseph Francis Muse


* John Rufus Nickerson


* Theresa Mary O'Connell


* Mary Theresa O'Malley


* Ruth Sargent Quimby


* Edward Demerrit Roake


* Evelyn Montgomery Sanborn


* Maude Mary Sansom


* Malcolm Cleaves Sargent


* Edgar Gordon Schaedel


* George Woodbury Simpson


* Russell Francis Sullivan


* Joseph Gowing Taylor Josephine Gile Taylor


* Joseph Francis Twohig


Florence Estelle Tyzzer


* Stuart Hamilton Vaughn


* Julia May Ward


* Lewis Roger Wentworth


* Howard Grover Wheaton


* Henry Francis Whitney


* Phillip Edmond Wilkinson


Mary Elizabeth Evangeline Young


Washington School.


* Mae Emma Abbott Ruth Marie Anderson * Dorothy Atkinson


* Douglas Brooks Baker


* Ida Bernice Barnard


* Hazel Merriam Barnes


* Marion Dunn Merrill


* Elizabeth Gertrude Miller


* George Julian Moulton


* Arthur Tapley Munyan


* Alice Elizebeth Nelson


* Lillian Nowell


* Patrick Leo O'Riley


* Leon Blanchard Damon


* Joseph William Doherty * Anna Regina Donaher


* Thomas Donaher


* Margaret Ellis


* Alice Mercedes Fahy


* John Andrew Feeley


* Emma Elizabeth Fuller


* Gardiner Luce Ida Maud McDonald Ethel McHardy


* Ruth Ida McKinnon Alice Winifred McNear


* Helen Seward Barnes Mary Loretta Broggan


* Catherine Agnes Buckley Florence Helena Cargill


* Ralph Waldo Cram Alice May Daley


* Leslie Omsby


* Mildred Holmes Page


* Gertrude Lillian Parker


* Florence Gertrude Perry


* Martha Upham Rendall


* Raymond Eaton Rendall


Ruby Roberta Robertson


* Louis Victor Rowe


* Paul Brady Rebecca Lena Brown


* Dorothy Houghton Burns


* John Williard Buttrick


* Mary Agnes Callahan Lillian Mildred Chase


* Walter Whitney Colby


* Harry Lewis Cook * Hazel Gertrude Cowdry


* David Wilson Craig Annie Isabel Crawford


* Minot Joy Crowell


* William Albert Cunningham


* James Edward Doucette


* Jeffrey John Doucette Hazel Dean Duby


* Ernest Harold Fales * Mamie Louise Ferguson


* Louis Shumway Finger James Joseph Flynn William Vincent Forbes


* Clarissa Winnifred Gately


* Lynde Gatley


* Helen Harriet Hart Gerry Mary Ellen Grennen Gertrude Hartigan


* Forrest Oscar Heartz * Harold Ellis Holmes


* Bertha Gladys Howe


* Della May Hull


Myrtie May Hutchinson


Rose Latinsky


* Osborne Everett Leisk


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CITY OF MELROSE


Frank Curtis Grundy


* Marcy Honiss Hall


* Bertha Allen Hemenway Weldon Booth Hindon Chester Ambrose Hitchins


* Charles Edward Holt


* Isabell Cecile Holt Blanche Jeannette Howe


* Ruth Alden Hoyt


* Lawrence Richard Hunewill Joseph Thomas Hunter Isabel Josephine Johnson


* Mildred Emily Jones Mildred Elizabeth Kennard


* Melville Phyllis Lavin


* John Nathan Levy Edward Francis Lloyd


Rena Maud Russell John Joseph Sheehan


* Hazel Dean Shields


* Mildred Bates Sloane


* Randall Sylvester Smith


* Isabella Snowden


* Eva Maud Stanley


* Fred Harold Storey


* Miriam Vaughn Swett


* Samuel James Warren


* Walter William Watson


* Margaret Alice Walley


* Bradford Haines White


* Roger Winship


* John Arthur Woods


* John Harold Woodward * William Dewart Young


* Florence Edith Lowe


Franklin School.


* Henry S. Ackerman William R. Apt


* John F. Babcock


Lawrence Beard


* Eugene W. Berry


* Fdith Dorothy Brennan


* Phillip W. Codwise


* Arthur E. Collins


* Margery Cox


Cecil B. Crawford


* James C. Durgin


* Leslie C. Durrell


* Lillian Fahey


* Hazel T. Fansworth


Joel Snow Fawcett


* Marion A. Flagg


* Louine E. Ford


* Grace French


* Everett Fuller


* William A. Furze Maurice S. Gerrish


* Irving Russell


* Lincoln Scott


* Edward Snow Marion C. Taylor


* Robert Guest Amelia Hammerle


* Earle Thomson


* Charles Harrington


* Clarence Wanamaker


* Harold Warren


* Homer White


* Kathryn B. White


* H. Ray Wilson


* Douglas B. Howe Norman Jefts


* Mabel Kenny


* Anna C. Knight


* Elmer E. Laycock Dora Levine


* Halsey Lewis


* Lester N. Littlefield


* Norman McDonald


* Louise MacLaren Rose K. Morse Agnes Mullen


* Ernest M. Nickerson


* Earl Dexter Page Gladys Partelow Muriel C. Pease


* John D. Pendleton Zelma N. Prescott


* Alice N. Rigby


* Evelyn M. Ross


* Ida J. Ruben


* Clifford B. Russell


* Edwin A. Gill Ernest Grundy


* Edward E. Harris


* Beulah A. Hatch


* Perry S. Hawes


* Jean M Woodman


* Entered High School, September, 1907. 81 per cent.


ORGANIZATION OF THE SCHOOL STAFF. December 31, 1907.


Superintendent of Schools, Fred H. Nickerson, 77 Upham Street. Superintendent's Clerk, Rosetta M. Pendleton, 179 Trenton Street.


CORPS OF TEACHERS.


High School.


Name.


Grade.


Where Educated. When Elected


William C. Whiting .


Principal


Dartmouth College, 1899


Alonzo G. Whitman


Principal Emeritus


Bowdoin College


.1874


George A. Hutchins


Sub-master


Bates College


.1901


C. Ross Appler .


Business Department


Drexel Institute, Philadelphia, Pa.


. 1905


Orren H. Smith


English Department


Tufts College


1906


Frederick R. Willard


English, Science


Boston University


1906


Adelma A. Ballou


Latin


Dean Academy


1887


Harriet C. Fairbanks


Algebra, Latin .


Natick High School ..


1880


Hattie G. Ricker


French


Lapham Institute .


1884


Christine D. Ross


Modern Language Dept.


Partial Course, Elgin Academy, Scotland ..


.1904


Lillian A. Bolster


French, German


Partial Course, Harvard & Chicago University 1904


Elizabeth F. Abbe.


Greek. English


Wellesley College


. 1906


Clara A. Snell.


Mathematics


Bates College


.1904


Horace Kidger


History Department


Dartmouth College


. 1907


Mary A. Cutter


Stenography .


Leland Stanford Junior University


.1907


Edith S. Blake


English, Mathematics


Bates College. ..


.1903


Susan R. Scott .


English, Mathematics


Brown University .


1907


Gertrude Gile


History


Radcliffe College . 1907


SCHOOL REPORT


73


Franklin School, Cor. Main and Franklin Streets.


Name


Grade


Where Educated


When Elected


Frank E. Poland


Principal


Castine, (Me.) Normal School


.1906


Linnie M. DeMeritt IX


New Ilampton Institute . .1904


Mary G. Hickey


IX


Boston University .


1907


Elizabeth G. Saunders


VIII


Plymouth Normal School.


.1906


Lillian G. Runnells


VIII & VII


Bridgewater Normal School


1905


Louise G. White


VII .


Salem Normal School


1895


Grace L. Pomeroy


VI


New Haven (Conn.) Normal


1905


Annie Dinnie


VI .


Quincy Training School




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