USA > Massachusetts > Norfolk County > Quincy > Inaugural address of the mayor, with the annual report of the officers of the city of Quincy for the year 1897 > Part 19
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PRESENTATION OF DIPLOMAS, By the School Committee.
108
Introductory Remarks,
Hon. Charles II. Porter, Chairman of the Board.
Chorus,-"Our Public Schools," J. P. Skelley Words by Frederic Allison Tupper.
March.
Drummer-Albion R. MeKay Director of Music,-Mrs. L. C. F. Smith Pianists, § Helen E. Bemis, Q. II. S., '97. Helen Sibley, Q. H. S., '99. Private Reception to Graduates by the Principals immediately after these Exercises.
GRADUATES OF JUNE, 1897.
ADAMS SCHOOL.
Eliza Jane Bennett,
Isabell R. McIntosh,
Loring Bigelow,
Isabelle MeDonnell,
Herbert W. Curtis,
Mary Garland Mischler;
Abbie M. Denton,
Michael Maher,
Annie Dougherty,
Bessie Robbie, James H. Roche,
George Dubois,
James McDonald,
Julia Brown Roche,
Katie Elizabeth Flowers,
Thomas Lyall Skinner,
Lottie May Flowers,
William J. Spargo,
Lucy Elmore Gagnon,
Augusta Sweeney, Dennis Sweeney,
Nellie Frances Haynes,
Mabel Estella Hunter,
Mary A. Sullivan, Franklin S. Strickland,
Delia Jones,
William Tueker, William E. Tarbox,
Marcus E. Mahon, John McAuliffe, Joseph MeConnel, Mary McConnel,
Thomas H. Welsh, Michael J. O'Brien,
Helena MeConarty, James McDonald,
Margaret Powers,
Margurite C. Gavin.
109
CODDINGTON SCHOOL.
Annie M. Baker,
Lillian May Brown,
Susan Hughes Cannon,
George Weston Munroe,
David Colligan,
Florence Frances Newcomb, Joseph Warren Paschal,
Petra Marie Dahldorff,
Margaret Isabelle Davidson,
Ellen Christina Donovan
Clara May Emery,
Katherine Regan,
Thomas Henry Foy,
Mary Lucille Rogers,
Margaret Elizabeth Gallagher, Joel Fithian Sheppard,
Ellen Gilraine,
Bertha Louise Hanson,
HIowland John Harkins,
Howard Davis Vinton,
Jennie Johnson Harris,
Catharine Florence Walsh,
Joseph Robinson Harris,
David White,
Francis Everett Winslow.
GRIDLEY BRYANT SCHOOL.
Gerald Francis Barry,
Mary Martha Barry, Joseph Belanger, Kittie Bolger,
Teresa Catherine Howley, Ellen Joyce,
John Joseph Joyce, John Duggan, Jr.
Bridget Connelly,
Catherine Keenan,
Mary Gwendolina Dalton,
Edward Keenan,
Edward Joseph Donovan,
Michael Kelly,
Margaret Jane Ellis,
James King,
Charles James McGilvray,
Margaret Ellen Egan, Catherine Elizabeth Fitzgerald, John MeLaughlin, Jolın Kellmin MeLaughlin.
JOHN HANCOCK SCHOOL.
Daniel Donahue, John Donovan,
Barbara MeDougall,
Angus McIntosh,
Albion Robinson Mac Kay,
Mary Elizabeth McCormick. Ellen McDonald,
Mabelle Siders Perry, Thomas Patrick Regan,
Grace Rodgers Stancombe, Arthur Brockton Turner,
110
John Miller Gordon, John Peter Johnson,
Katherine Frances Kelley,
Agnes Maud McDonald, Elizabeth McDonald, Arabella MeDougall,
Daniel Murphy, Pearl Frances Nightingale, Jennie Mary Ryden, William Alexander Smith, Benjamin Jackson Tinney, Beatrice Robina Walker.
LINCOLN SCHOOL.
Sadie Isabelle Adams,
Annie Bernhardina Carlson,
Edith Gertrude Coyle,
George Craig,
Mabel Mary Favero,
Anna Josephine Gill,
Katie May Gillis, John David Griffiths,
Maggie Isabella Shirley,
Mary Reed Spargo, Helen Martha Warner.
QUINCY SCHOOL.
Nellie Thayer Mitchell,
Walter T. B. Clare,
Elizabeth M. Sullivan,
Bertha Mabel Miles,
Marion D. Vogler,
Catherine Murphy,
Edward E. Whittaker,
Sadie M. Johnson, Rudolph J. Bartelt,
Vernon C. Hallett,
Ada Barton Harding,
Frank G. Kingston,
Robert Blanchard Nelson,
Bertha Marian Nichols,
Mary Agnes Murphy,
Mabel Bunten,
Ruth Eva McKay,
Ernest S. Woodman,
Henry Caldwell Greene.
WASHINGTON SCHOOL.
Charles N. Bosworth, Elizabeth Brown, Victoria May Carter,
James Allen Melville, Margaret Mary McGuane, Harold Whittier Newcomb,
Edward Patrick Kenney, John Joseph Kenney, Margaret Louisa McLaughlin, William John Alex. G. McLean,
John Norrie, Joel Peterson,
Marion Louise Evans,
111
Margaret Lillie Coffey, Edward Everett Ford, Harry Baxter Glidden, Daniel Francis Higgins, Margaret Logan, Frank Wellington Lynch,
Lottie Belle Perry, Arthur Wise Slade, Frederick S. Shepherd, Carl William Sherburne, Charles Henry Taylor, Bertha Louise Tower, Eleanor Pierce Wild.
WILLARD SCHOOL.
John Barry, Joseph Ambrose Barry, John Joseph Boyle, . John Joseph Cain, John Cashman, Thomas Dillon, Ira Thurston Doble,
George Joseph Donaher, James Flaherty, Philip Garity, Harry Roland Huntington,
Daniel Adams Lane,
Edward Francis Lane, George Marshall Luce, Daniel Martell, Joseph Elcock McTiernan, James A. Garfield Pierce, James Ryan, Charles Edward Thomas, David Evan Thomas, William Harry Trask, Myron Bennett Turner, John Bennett Vogel,
Florence Mary Berry, Mary Ethel Burns, Mary Dillon,
Jennie Vesta Lulu Doble, Margaret Mary Donovan, Catherine Doyle, Stella Elcock, Amy Louise Fuge,
Mary Jane Hinnegan, Alda Flora Leclair, Mary Elizabeth Lyons,
Mary McCue, Catherine McDonald,
Martha Ann Elizabeth McKee,
Sara Elizabeth Monahan, Emma Matilda Peterson,
Nellie Pickering, Margaret Reilly, Mary Elena Ring,
Annie Ellen Bandeen Rose, Marie Gladys Shea, Mary Shortle, Arville Dodge Walker.
112
WOLLASTON SCHOOL.
John Garfield Anderson, Martha Orvilla Andrews, Lowell McIntosh Baker, Roy Cleveland Baker, Marion Hall Bates, Emerson Thayer Bates, Winifred Adelaide Backus, Mira Stanwood Brown, Austin Cooper Ball, Mary Agnes Cain, Louis Bancroft Estabrooks, Gordon Hague Gannett, Harry Freeman Holmes, Katherine Davenport Howe, Frederic Burnham Jacobs, Carl Anthony Lewis, Arthur Leslie Marr,
Elisa Lois Metherall, Frederic Harrison Mitchell, Royal Archibald Moore, Nathan Gorham Nickerson, Jr. Franklin Stewart Nichols, Sophia Mildred Pillsbury, Robert Sanborn Pinkham, Marguerite Charlotte Reece, Frances Waldo Sanders, Jennie Blanche Saunders, Alda Orietta Shay, Olive Gardiner Shuman, Katharine Sibley, Lelia Edna Stevens, Frederick Gilles Thayer, Joseph Emerson Whittier, Charles Francis M. Winship, Robert Garfield Wright.
113
Data of Quincy.
THE CITY OF PRESIDENTS.
Be it ordained by the City Council of Quincy, as follows :
Section 1. The design of the City Seal shall be a circle, one and one-half inches in diameter: the centre of the Seal a view of "Mount Wollaston ;" in the outer circle, over the top, the dates 1625, 1640, 1792; upon a scroll under the dates the word "Manet ;" upon a tablet under the view the word "Quincy" the date of the incorporation as a city, 1888.
16
1625 ingun in.innanaan
MANET
1625, Capt. Wollaston.
1640, Braintree incorporated.
1792, Quincy a town.
QUINCY?
1888, Quincy a city.
1888
Legend : Manet (ma net), (Quincy) remains.
114
Place :
Merry Mount, Mare Mount,
Passonagessit,
Mount Wollaston
Landing place of Capt. Wollaston. Home of Morton. Scene of the "May pole."" Home of Ex-Mayor, Hon. C. F. Adams, 2d.
Tree: "The lone, barren savin tree, which has for ages withstood the blasting storms. Trunk still standing.
Water : Quincy bay.
Quincy's mother, Braintree, (Monatiquct. )
Quincy's sisters, Randolph (1793.) Holbrook (1872.)
Ward I, Centre (Houghs Neck, Germantown. ) II Point (Neck.)
III, South (Plains.) Two precincts.
IV, West (The Rail, Town Hill.) Two precincts.
V, Wollaston, (Heights, Park.) VI, Atlantic (Squantam, Norfolk Downs, The Farms. )
Valuation, $18,012,146. Tax levy, $350,690.
Rate, $18.80.
Area, 16.7 sq. mi. (2530 A in public parks.)
Population, 1897, 23,000 (?)
Latitude, 42ºN. (Boston, 42° 21' 30")
Longitude, 71° W ( “ 71° 4' 9")
Variation of needle, 11° to 12° west of north.
Polls, Dec. 7, 1897, 6170.
Voters,
4058.
Votes cast,
66
3427.
Representative district, fifth Norfolk, (Two representatives.) Senatorial, first Norfolk.
Councillor, second.
Congressional, tenth.
City election, first Tuesday in December.
115
Population and Growth :
1792
*1,000
1830,
2,201
1870,.
7,442
1800,
1,081
1840,
3,486
1880, :
10,570
1810,
1,281
1850,
5,017
1890,
16,711
1820,
1,623
1860,
6,778
1892 · * 19,000
1895,
20,712
1897,
*23,000
*Estimated.
From westerly line of Blue Hills to easterly point of Quincy Neck it is 82 miles and to the easterly rock in Squan- tum it is 72 miles. From Neponset bridge to Quincy Point bridge it is 5 miles.
Mile stones of the old Plymouth road : (Old Colony.)
Public Parks : Merry Mount, Faxon, Blue Hill Reserva- tion.
Ilon. Charles H. Porter,
1889-90
Hon. Henry O. Fairbanks,
1891-92-93
Mayors,
Hon. William A. Hodges, 1893-95
Hon. C. F. Adams, 2d, 1896-97
Hon. Russell A. Sears, 1898
Council : Twenty-three members. Three from each ward and five-at-large.
School Board : Nine members. One from each ward and three- at-large.
Administrative Officers :
1. Commissioner of Public Works.
2. City Treasurer.
3. City Clerk.
4. Collector of Taxes.
5. City Solicitor.
6. Chief of Police.
7. Chief Engineer of Fire Department.
8. Overseer of the Poor.
116
9. Principal Assessor and six assistants.
10. Park Commissioners.
11. Board of Health.
12. Trustees of Crane Library.
13. Managers of Adams Academy.
14. Managers of Public Burial Places.
Quincy granite : Bunker Hill Monument, King's Chapel and Custom House in Boston and the Stone Temple and City Hall in Quincy are built of this material.
Earthquake Day : Nov. 18, 1755. Vid John Adams' Diary.
War of Rebellion : Quincy sent 954 men.
Deaths, 105. Total cost, 848,912.11.
NAMES OF SCHOOL BUILDINGS.
Quincy High School. Name of the city.
Adams. John, Second President, 1797-1801. John Quincy, Sixth President, 1825-29. Coddington. William Coddington, "Quincy's first benefactor," ."Father of Rhode Island."
Gridley Bryant. Builder of Bunker Hill Monument and of the railroad in West Quincy. First train ran Oct. 7, 1826. Horse-power. First incorporated rail- road in America.
John Hancock. Born in Quincy. First Governor of Mass., President Continental Congress, first signer of Declaration of Independence.
Lincoln. Abraham Lincoln. Sixteenth President.
117
Massachusetts Fields. "The spot which was to the Massachu- setts ( Indians) what the Isthmian Fields were to the Greeks. In all Massachusetts there was no site of greater historical importance than this; for from it the Commonwealth may, in some sense, be said to have derived its name."
Quincy.
Col. John Quincy, descendant in the third gener- ation from Edmund 2d, who settled in Quincy; in 1634. Grandfather of Abigail (Smith) Adams. In 1792 the new town was named in honor of. Col. Quincy.
Washington. George Washington, First President.
Willard. Solomon Willard, citizen of Quincy, inventor of hot air furnace, designer of Bunker Hill Mounment- and of the monument at "Old North Bridge," Concord. "While Solomon Willard laid open the quarry and devised the drills, the derricks and the shops, Gridley Bryant was building a rail- way."
Wollaston. Captain Wollaston landed in 1625 on what has since been known as Mount Wollaston and Merry Mount.
SCHOOL CENSUS, MAY, 1897.
Between 5 and 15 years 4,720
Whole number different pupils 1897. 5,100
Number of teachers 115
Superintendents :-
Col. Francis W. Parker, April, 1875. Sylvester Brown, April, 1880. Geoge I. Aldrich, April, 1883. Herbert W. Lull, Jan., 1892.
118
Evening common schools began, Oct., 1870.
Vid. Acts and Resolves of 1883, sec. 1, chap. 174. Transportation began, 1874. "Probably the first town to act under the law of 1869." Drawing introduced, 1881.
Free textbooks, 1884.
Evening drawing school, Oct., 1885.
Vid. Acts and Resolves, 1883, sec. 7, chap. 44.
Music introduced, 1887.
Tenure of office for teachers, 1889.
Nature work introduced, 1890.
Sewing introduced, (Grades V-VIII) 1892.
Cooking introduced ( High School), 1892.
Vertical writing, (Grades I, II, III,), 1896.
Adams Academy (semi-publie). September, 1872 Marks birth-place of John Hancock.
Woodward Institute (semi-public), April, 1894.
Sailors' Snug Harbor. National Sailors' Home.
Steam railroad: N. Y., N. II. & II. R. R., main line and branch Stations : Atlantic, Norfolk Downs, Wollaston, Quincy, Quincy Adams, Montclair, West Quincy.
Electric railroad : Quincy and Boston ; runs from the centre in seven directions, Hancock street, Newport avenue, Elm avenue, Coddington street, Washington street, Water street, Independence avenue.
Earliest names :
1 .- Rev. John Wilson, house just south of
119
the new Episcopal chapel, Hancock street, Wollaston.
2 .- William Coddington.
3 .- Edmund Quincy (2d.)
4 .- Atherton Hough.
5 .- Rev. John Wheelwright.
6 .- Anne Hutchinson (memorial stone and tablet, Wollaston.) .
Tutor, Henry Flynt, Harvard College.
Josiah Quincy (3d), President Harvard College.
"The Dorothy Q." (Jacksons, Wendells, Holmeses ) ( Oliver Wendell Holmes). Another "Dorothy Q." (wife of John Hancock) niece of "The Dorothy Q.".
Squantum, Cairn, 1621,-1895, Miles Standish.
Penn's Hill, Cairn, 1775-1896, Abigail Adams.
Quincy Historical Society, Birthplace of John Quincy Adams (South.)
Adams Chapter, Daughters of the Revolution, Birthplace John Adams (North.)
Thomas Crane Public Library, Books, 20,000. Patrons, 14,486.
The Quincy (Butler) house, Hancock street, Black's brook, 1685.
The Adams home ( Vassal house); President's bridge.
The "Stone Temple." Burial place of two Presidents.
Col. John Quincy. Name of the town. 1792. Grand- father of Abigail Adams.
John Adams. First Vice President, 1789-1797. Second President, 1797-1801.
"Colossus of Independence." Harvard, 1755.
John Quincy Adams. Sixth President, 1825-1829. "Old Man Eloquent." Harvard, 1787.
John Hancock. First Governor Massachusetts, 1780. Presi- dent Continental Congress. First signer of
120
Declaration of Independence. "The official sanction subscribed to the instrument for her (Quincy) becoming an independent munici- pality, was given by her honored and illus- trious son, John Hancock, then Governor of the State." In 1792 at the first election John Hancock received all the votes cast for gover- nor, 51 in number.
SOME GEOLOGICAL DATA BY MISS H. A. KENNEDY.
Hills : Glacial, rock.
Glacial action : Smooth surfaces of outcrops. South Quincy- Scratched surfaces. West Quincy, Squantum. Deposits : Drumlins, boulders of diabase. The diabase has same composition as that in Meford and Somer- ville. The tilted strata in the quarry at Atlantic probably broken from mass of slate by the glac- ier.
Rocks : Fragmental along coast region, puddingstone, sand- stone and slate.
Plutonic: Granite of varying color and texture. The granite is erupted through slate. The contact is shown in West Quincy. Sides of the slate baked be- cause of contact with the hot granite.
Diorite : Dyke beyond West Quincy station in granite. Sides of dyke have slipped away from granite wall be- cause of contact with cold granite.
Volcanic : Melaphyr at Houghs Neck.
Erosion : Squaw's Head shaped and eaten out by water. Drumlins washed down by water and flats made, thus connecting mainland and islands.
Formations : Dendrite on slate at Squantum and Atlantic. Veins of quartz in sandstone and pudding stone .. Quartz crystals deposited in cavities in sand- stone.
, 121
Slickenside formation is the result of the slip- ping of granite masses over each other during faults.
Decomposition : Granite in quarry of Craig and Richards. Result is feldspar changed to kaolin and the quartz is mass of glassy quartz.
Relations of rocks : The granite corresponds to the eruptive rock rhyolite of the Western States. Rhyolite flows probably covered the surface of Quincy. Granite now a hill because the overlying materials have been eroded. From 5,000 to 10,000 feet have been washed away since the granite crystal- ized. Pebbles of the granite are found in the puddingstone; therefore the granite is older. The Braintree slates are older than this granite ; for the granite came through the slate.
SEAL OF COMMONWEALTH.
Official description of the State seal. The great seal cocco L SI NSIS UM REIF of the Commonwealth shall be circu- lar in form, and shall bear upon its face a representation of the arms of the Common- wealth, with an inscription round about such re sen- ENSE PETIT tation, consisting of the words "SIGILLUM RE- IPUBLICA MASSACHU- SETTENSIS :" but the col- LACIDAM SUB L ors of such arms shall not be S 23090006 LIBERTATE QUIETEM WOTTE an essential part of said seal, and an impression from an engraved seal according to said design, on any commission, paper, or document of any
122
kind, shall be valid to all intents and purposes, whether such -colors, or the representation of such colors by the customary heraldic lines or marks, be employed or not.
The arms of the Commonwealth shall consist of a shield, whereof the field or surface is blue, and thereon an Indian dressed in his shirt and moccasins, holding in his right hand a bow, in his left hand an arrow, point down- ward, all of gold ; and in the upper corner above his right arm a silver star with five points. The crest ENSE PETIT shall be a wreath of blue and gold, PLACIDAM LIBERTATE whereon is a right arm bent at the SUB elbow, and clothed and ruffled, the hand grasping a broadsword, all of gold. The motto shall be "ENSE PETIT PLACIDAM LIBERTATE QUIETEM."
INSCRIPTION (translated ) : Seal of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
MOTTO (translated) : With the sword she seeks calm peace under liberty ; or, With the sword she seeks peaceful quiet with freedom; or, With the sword she seeks the tranquil peace of freedom.
Massachusetts : Representatives to Congress, 13. (Total 357. Ratio, 173,901.) Senators, 2 (Total, 90.) Towns 321. Cities 32.
Constitution of United States, 1789; of Massachusetts, 1780; incorporation of Quincy, 1792.
123
THOMAS CRANE PUBLIC LIBRARY.
BOOKS FOR TEACHERS READING.
Science and Art of Education, Joseph Payne, 554,1
Lectures on Teaching, J. G. Fitch, 554.2
Culture Demanded by Modern Life,
Edited by E. L. Youmans, 554.3
Education, Intellectual, Moral, and Physical,
Herbert Spencer, 554.4
Principles of Education, Applied to Female Education, E. M. Sewell, 554.5
True Order of Studies,
Rev. Thos. Hill, 554.6
Theory of Teaching, Elizabeth P. Peabody, 554.7 Principles and Practice of Teaching, James Johonnot 554.8
Gentle Measures in Training the Young,
Jacob Abbott, 554.9
Education as a Science,
A. Bain,
554.10
Mind and Body,
A. Bain, 555.21
How to Educate Yourself,
G. C. Eggleston, 554.11
What to do, and Why.
N. Sizer, 554.12
Technical Education,
C. B. Stetson, 554.14
Course of Study and Manual of Instruction,
W. B. Powell, 554.15
Essays on Educational Reformers. R. II. Quick. 554.16
Elementary Principles of Education, 2 v.
Elizabeth Hamilton, 554.17,18
The "Quincy Methods" Illustrated.
L. E. Patridge, 554.19
Moral Education,
J. R. Buchanan, 554.20
Notes of Talks on Teaching,
F. W. Parker, 554.21
Power and Authority of School Officers and Teachers,
554.23
Moral Culture of Infancy, and Kindergarten Guide, ( Mrs. Horace Mann 2 E. P. Peabody, 554.26
124
Paradise of Childhood : Guide to Kinder-Gartners.
Edward Wiebe, 554.27
Primary Object Lessons, N. A. Calkins, 554.28
Elementary Language Lessons in Drawing,
Frank born, 554.30
Lectures and Reports on Education, 2 y Horace Mann, 555.9,10 Day Dreams of a Schoolmaster, D'Arcy W. Thompson, 555.13 The School and the Family, John Kennedy, 555.15
Our Common School System, M. 1. Dodge, 555.17
Education in its Relation to Manual Industry,
A. MacArthur, 555.18
Manual Training, C. H. Ham, 555.32
The State in its Relation to Education. Henry Craik, 555.33
Philosophy of Education, J. K. F. Rosenkranz, 555.34
History of Education, F. V. N. Painter. 555.35
Elementary Psychology and Education,
Joseph Baldwin, 555.39
Life and Methods of Pestalozzi.
Edited by Henry Barnard. 556.1 Objeet Teaching & Principles of Primary Education. Edited by Henry Barnard. 556.2
German Pedagogy, .. 556.3
English Pedagogy, 2 v. ..
556.4,5
Letters, Essays, and Thoughts on Studies and Conduct,
Edited by Henry Barnard, 556.6
Miscellaneous Pamphlets on Education, 3 v. 556.9,11,12
History of Pedagogy, Gabriel Compayre, 556.14
Science of the Mind Applied to Teaching, U. J. Hoffman, 556.15
Contributions to the Science of Education, W. HI. Payne, 556.16 .
Educational Psychology. . L. P. Hopkins, 556.23
Lessons on practical subjects for Grammar School
children, ( S. Forbes, -
C. W. Faucon, )
556.24
History of a Mouthful of Bread. Jean Mace. 192.47
125
Servants of the Stomach,
66 .. 492.18
School and Industrial Hygiene,
D. F. Lincoln, 492.42
The Brain and its Functions,
J. Luys, 553.10
The Intellectual Life,
P. G. Hamerton, 553.12
Study in Human Nature,
Lyman Abbott, 552.40
Human Psychology,
E. Janes, 552.43
First Three years of Childhood,
B. Perez, 552.41
Outlines of Psychology,
James Sully, 552.9
Education : an International Magazine, 7 v.
588.1-7
Moral Instruction of Children, Adler,
555.53
Methods of Mind-Training,
Aiken, 556.19
Reports on Elementary schools, 1852-82,
Arnold, 555.12
The Emotions and the Will,
Bain,
553.2
Mental Development in the Child, and the Race.
James M. Baldwin, 552.42
Elementary Psychology and Education,
Joseph Baldwin, 555.39
Psychology Applied to the Art of Teaching School
555.51
School Management and School Methods,
555.73
Papers on Froebel's Kindergarten,
Barnard,
556.7
Symbolic Education,
Blow, 555.58
Education in the United States,
Boone,
555.44
Educational Ends,
Bryant, 556.20
Intellectual and Moral Development of the Child,
Part I, Compayre,
555.67
Education of the Greek People,
Davidson, 555.60
Education : An International Magazine, 1880-97-17 vol 588.1-17 Schoolmaster in Literature, Eggleston, 555.5
Education from a National Standpoint,
Fouillee,
555.55
Education of Mau,
Froebel, 555.38
Mottoes and Commentaries of Froebel's Mother Play,
555.63
Pedogogics of the Kindergarten,
555.62
Sougs and Music of Froebel's Mother Play,
555.64
Child and Nature; or Geogrophy Teaching with sand
Modelling, Frye, 554.31
Teaching iu Three Continents,
Grasby, 556.21
Pestalozzi ; His Life and Work,
Guimps, 555.47
126
Studies in American Education,
Hart, 556.28 A B C of Sense-Perception and Minor Pedagogical
Works, Herbart, 555.69 555.50
Textbook in Psychology
B. A. Teaching the Language-Arts,
Hinsdale, 555.66
How to Study and Teach History,
555.57
Sloyd System of Wood Working,
B. B. Hoffman,
555.11
Froebel's First "Gift" to the Child in the Kinder- garten, Heinrich, Hoffman, 554.45 Hopkins, 556.22
Spirit of the New Education,
Systematic Science Teaching,
Howe,
555.59
Practical Hints for Teachers of Public Schools,
Howland, 555.46 Froebel's Educational Laws for all Teachers, Hughes, 555.73
Principles of Psychology, 2 vols.
James, 552.52-53
Memory : What is it and How to Improve it,
Kay, 555.42
Methods and Aids in Geography,
King, 555.30
European Schools,
Klemm, 555.45
Higher Education of Women in Europe,
Lange,
555.49
Rise and Early Constitution of Universities,
Laurie,
555.36
Psychology of Number : Applications to Methods of Teaching Arithmetic, Mclellan and Dewey, 555.65
Evolution of the Massachusetts public school system,
Martin, 555.61
Ventilation and warming of School buildings,
Morrison,
555.37
Theory and practice of teaching,
Page, 556.25
How to study geography,
Parker,
555.43
Leonard and Gertrude,
Pestalozzi,
556.18
School Supervision,
Pickard,
555.48
Finger plays for nursery and kindegarten,
Poulsson,
554.29
Mental development in the child minde of the child,
Preyer,
555.26
Part 1. The senses and the will,
555.40
Part 2. Development of the intellect,
555.41
Public school system of the United States,
Rice,
556.27
School system of Ontario (Canada,)
Koss,
555.71
127
Emile, ou de l'education,
Rousseau, 556.17 Same, abridged. translated and annotated,
By W. H. Payne, 555.52
English education in the elementary and secondary schools, Sharpless, 555.54
Let him first be a man,
Veanble, 554.32
Alcuin and the rise of the Christian schools,
West, 554.35-
Elements of pedagogy,
White, 556.25
Wiggin,
554.25
Children's rights, Wiggin and Smith, Republic of childhood,
1. Froebel's gifts,
554.46
2. Froebel's occupations,
554.47
3. Kindergarten principles and practice,
554.48-
Manual training in education,
Woodward, 555.31
128
TEACHER'S LIBRARY.
OFFICE OF SUPERINTENDENT.
1. Famous European Artists, Sarah K. Bolton. Redway.
2. Teacher's Manual of Geography, .
3. Walks and Rides in and about Boston,
Bacon.
4. Child and Nature,
Frye.
5-6. School Management, (2)
Landon.
7. Primary Methods,
Hailmann. Hewett. Payne.
9. School Supervision,
10-11 Courses of Methods. (2)
Prince.
12. Page on Teaching,
13. Teaching and Class Management,
14. Life of Horace Mann,
15. Compayre's History of Pedagogy,
Payne.
16. Compayre's Lectures on Teaching,
Payne. Partridge.
17. The Quincy Methods,
18. Evolution of the Mass. Public School System, Martin.
19. Teaching the Language Arts, Hinsdale.
20. How to Study and Teach History.
Hinsdale.
21. Talks on Pedagogics,
Parker.
22. Elements of Pedagogy, White.
23. The Public School System of the U. S. Rice.
24. The Child and Childhood in Folk-thought, Chamberlain.
25. Education, Spencer.
26. Children's Rights,
Wilkins. Wilson.
27. Nature Study,
28. The Beginners of a Nation, Edward Eggleston.
29 Education of Central Nervous System, Halleck.
30. Methods of Mind Training, Catherine Aiken.
31. A Pot of Green Feathers, Rooper.
Payne. Landon. Mann.
8. Pedagogy,
129
32. Classified List of Books for Young People, in the Thomas Crane Library,
33. Manual of Mythology,
34. Social Evolution,
35 Pestalozzi,
36. Education of Man,
37. Conciliation with the Colonies,
Burke.
38. Ear and Voice Training,
Calkins.
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