Town annual report of Ipswich 1947, Part 10

Author: Ipswich (Mass.:Town)
Publication date: 1947
Publisher: Lynn News Press / J. F. Kimball
Number of Pages: 288


USA > Massachusetts > Essex County > Ipswich > Town annual report of Ipswich 1947 > Part 10


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In attempting to carry out his assignments, the playground director informs me, he has received the most generous sup- port from the officials of the Red Cross who sponsor the swim- ming program; from the Playground Committee, which has made freely available the equipment and facilities under their charge; from the manager of the Ipswich Beach; from Mr. Hill, the bus operator; and from the adult groups who use the playgrounds in the evening.


Adequate State-Aid for Education


Education for all in this country is no longer a dream merely of far seeing citizens; it is now a reality. It has become so by public demand in the past seventy years. The process has been written in the enrollment figures in our secondary schools alone, which during that time have multiplied ninety times while the general population increased but three-fold.


We are today committed to a policy of providing equal opportunities for education of every child in accordance with his abilities and his achievements.


17


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


That is the rightful demand of the public, but that demand is not being fulfilled. Within the bounds of Massachusetts we have school systems spending $85.00 a year per pupil for edu- cation; and school systems spending $250.00. There are chil- dren studying in well lighted, well ventilated rooms, surrounded by every inducement to good work; others study with inade- quate facilities amid the hum and buzz of overcrowded class- rooms. There are school systems with excellent physical plants and adequate well trained staffs of teachers, side by side with school systems with buildings in shambles and poorly trained inadequate staffs of teachers. So one could run the entire gamut from textbooks, physical equipment, to teaching staffs and find glaring inequalities in our Massachusetts schools.


For the most part these inequalities reflect not the value set upon education by the citizens of our Massachusetts towns and cities, but rather the inequalities in community wealth. So long as school funds are raised in Massachusetts almost wholly from real estate taxes in the local communities, so long will these inequalities frustrate our aim of equal educational op- portunities for all.


If we are to maintain the schools over a period of years even at their present efficiency, certainly if we are to meet the obligations of the future, we need a new and broader tax base from which to derive funds for education. We need such adequate financial aid on a state-wide basis as is commonplace in most other states of the union.


Those who are interested in education, those who are inter- ested in their community and have a stake in its real estate can do no greater service to their community, and incidentally to themselves, than by giving active support to the proposal pres- ently to appear before the Massachusetts legislature to provide substantial state-aid for education.


Respectfully submitted,


HARRY S. MERSON


18


COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF SCHOOL DEPARTMENT EXPENDITURES Years 1943-1947 Inclusive


Item


1943


1944


1945


1946


1947


1-General Expenses


.$


5,332.69


$ 5,560.34


$ 5,693.23


$ 6,194.76


$ 6,439.72


2-Health


1,786.63


1,865.14


2,406.52


2,649.76


2,525.08


3-Teachers' Salaries


65,778.37


66,205.46


68,623.62


85,374.69


94,423.56


4-Americanization Classes


347.00


288.00


367.00


110.00


312.00


5-Textbooks and Supplies


4,075.01


3,305.79


3,895.54


4,448.50


4,979.39


6-Tuition


275.00


348.60


642.06


1,176.78


1,280.75


7-Support of Truants


51.71


8-Transportation


7,623.62


8,192.29


8,674.97


9,408.53


10,203.60


9-Janitors' Salaries


8,033.80


7,830.78


7,216.64


8,575.51


8,876.02


10-Fuel, Water, Gas, Light


6,154.45


5,115.99


6,111.99


5,376.55


6,657.14


11-Maintenance and Repairs


4,814.72


3,449.41


3,038.81


8,000.59


7,293.76


12-Outlay


2,627.07


10.22


13-Diplomas and Graduation


155.58


212.10


116.02


118.75


163.66


1,367.02


1,421.43


1,324.61


873.46


1,569.70


14-Insurance Sub-Total


.$105,795.60


$106,422.40


$108,121.23


$132,307.88


$144,724.38


Salary Bonus Appropriation .


7,946.30


10,423.20


10,200.00


Special War Service Retirement Fund ....


177.25


226.25


825.50


.


Total Expenditures .


.$113,741.90


$117,022.85


$118,547.48


$133,133.38


$144,724.38


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


RECEIPTS To Town Treasury on Account of Education


Item


1943


1944


1945


1946


1947


Mass. Income Tax (Reimbursement


for Teachers)


.$ 8,989.60


$ 8,490.00


$ 8,580.50


$ 8,700.00


$ 8,532.25


Tuition-Rowley


2,720.00


2,735.50


2,366.50


2,970.00


3,600.00


Mass. Vocational Education


109.00


168.25


94.50


239.20


450.00


Feoffees


2,000.00


2,000.00


2,000.00


2,000.00


2,000.00


Sale of Supplies-Ind. Arts


287.08


47.84


272.32


356.14


Refund


119.71


2.00


Mass. Americanization Classes


111.00


154.50


·176.00


90.00


Transfer from Reserve Fund and Unexpended Balance 1942


*1,314.12


Rental of Auditorium


375.00


Total Receipts


$ 15,363.43


$ 13,837.33


$ 13,265.34


$ 14,181.52


$ 15,403.39


Net Cost (Subtract Receipts from Expenditures)


.$ 98,378.47


$103,185.52


$105,282.14


$118,951.86


$129,320.99


Number of Pupils Enrolled


972


930


943


957


972


Net Cost Per Pupil Enrolled


101.21


110.95


111.65


124.29


133.05


*Applicable to payment of Stoker for High School.


SOURCES OF REVENUE FOR OPERATING SCHOOLS 1947


Voted-Annual Town Meeting, 1947


.$142,785.00


Received from Feoffees


2,000.00


Total Revenue


. $144,785.00


Less Expenditures


144,724.38


Balance-Transferred to Revenue (Town)


$60.62


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


19


20


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


MEMBERSHIP BY AGE AND GRADE


October 1, 1947


Boys


21 &


Grade


Age | 5| 6| 7| 8| 9|10|11|12|13|14|15|16|17|18|19|20|Over |Total


I


|19|30| 5|


54


II


9|35| 5


1


50


III


11 24 3| 4|


42


IV


13|24|11| 2


50


V


4|24| 7|


2


1| 1


39


VI


4|23


7| 8


1


43


VII


4|25| 5|


2


1


37


VIII


4|21| 3| 3| 3


34


IX


1 8 14|11| 6| 1


41


X


13|17|12


5


47


XI


6|13|10


1|


1


31


XII


2|12


5|


1


1


21


P.G.


1|


2


1


4


Total. . .


19|39|51|42|31|43|36|40|43|34|37|37|29| 8| 2| 1|


1 | 493


Girls


Grade


Age | 5| 6| 7| 8| 9|10|11|12|13|14|15|16|17|18|19|20|Over |Total


I


|23|17| 2|


42


II


14|20| 5|


39


III


19|31| 3|


53


V


1|23| 5


29


VI


5|24 6


35


VII


8|22| 4 3| 1|


| 2


40


VIII


|10|17|


| 1|


1|


35


IX


12|30| 8|


1| 2


53


X


1|11|32| 1| 2|


1


48


XI


1| 9|21| 7|


1


39


XII


|13|17| 3|


1


34


P.G.


2|


2


Total


.|23|31|41|49|17|31|3739|345151|37|32| 4| 2| |


479


·


.


.


.


.


13|13| 3


1


30


21 &


TOTAL MEMBERSHIP - 972


21


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


DISTRIBUTION OF PUPILS BY SCHOOL AND GRADE October 1, 1947


Grade


Burley


Shatswell Winthrop


High


Total


I


35


28


33


96


II


27


30


32


89


III


34


26


35


95


IV


26


19


35


80


V


17


18


33


68


VI


24


30


24


78


VII


32


22


23


77


VIII


69


69


IX


94


94


X


95


95


XI


70


70


XII


55


55


P.G.


6


6


Total


195


173


215


389


972


.


ENROLLMENT STATISTICS


Enrollment - High School


.323


291


295


324


320


Enrollment - Grade VIII


87


88


73


69


Enrollment - Elementary


649


552


560


560


583


Total


972


930


943


957


972


·


22


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


SALARY SCHEDULE FOR TEACHERS IN THE IPSWICH PUBLIC SCHOOLS


(January 1, 1948)


1. Among the purposes for which this salary schedule is designed are the following:


(a) To attract capable teachers to service in this town.


(b) To give stability to the teaching staff by making it less to the advantage of our capable teachers to accept positions elsewhere.


(c) To promote continued professional growth of the teachers.


(d) To attract to the profession young people of out- standing ability.


(e) To enable the teachers to maintain adequate living and cultural standards and to accumulate reasonable savings.


(f) To enable the school committee better to predict salary items of the annual budgets.


2. This salary schedule shall become effective September 1, 1948.


3. No teacher now in service is to receive a reduction of salary by application of this schedule.


4. Every new teacher shall have a bachelor's degree and substantial preparation in the field in which he is to teach.


5. The following will be the schedule of minimum and maximum salaries and step-rate increases for regular classroom teachers:


23


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


Teacher with no degree or less than 4 years' training


Teacher with Bachelor's Degree or equal training


Master's Degree or equal training


Step


Class I


Class II


Class III


Period


1


1700


2050


2250


2


1800


2150


2350


A


3


1900


2250


2450


4


2000


2350


2550


5


2100


2450


2650


B


6


2200


2550


2750


7


2300


2650


2850


8


2400


2750


2950


C


9


2500


2850


3050


10


2600


2950


3150


11


2700


3000


3200


D


12


2700


3000


3200


Super-maximum


to be arrived at


not less than 8


years


3000


3300


3500


During the periods A, B, C, and D, three college credits of approved study must be successfully completed to qualify for the next series of increases.


6. Step-rate increases shall become effective in September of each year, and shall be voted upon by the School Committee upon recommendation by the Superintendent of Schools at the time of the awarding of annual contracts in April.


24


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


7. To be eligible for step-rate increases, a teacher is to maintain an average of 2.0 or better on the scale (1) excellent, (2) good, (3) fair, (4) unsatisfactory, in ratings by superin- tendent and principal, using the following 10 criteria:


1. Personality (making for good classroom spirit).


2. Pupil control and general management.


3. Teaching techniques.


4. Co-operation with principal, supervisors, parents, and pupils.


5. Preparation of lessons and plan books.


6. Punctuality.


7. Professional improvement.


8. Proper use of supplies, books, and equipment.


9. Accuracy and promptness in completing reports.


10. Teacher initiative.


8. A teacher may receive the first series of three annual increments for satisfactory service as determined by the pre- ceding scale; but to be eligible for recommendation for the next series of three increments (and for each series of three incre- ments thereafter) the teacher must complete successfully 3 college credits of study approved by the superintendent of schools, during the previous three year period.


9. When a teacher has attained to the maximum in his classification, he may, after completing successfully 3 college credits of study approved by the superintendent, become eligible for increments toward the super-maximum. An increment of $10.00 may be recommended toward this super-maximum for each semester hour of college study during the calendar year preceding the school year when the increment may be in effect. Not more than 4 semester hours of credit is to be allowed toward such an increment in any one year. The total of the increments obtained in this manner shall not exceed $300.


25


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


10. Teachers whose qualifications have been determined to qualify them to move from one level of preparation to the next higher may, upon recommendation of the superintendent, be placed in the new classification at the time of the annual election of teachers in April. In the new classification, the teacher will receive the same salary as in the old, but he will be eligible to receive the increments provided in the higher classification.


11. Application of new schedule to teachers already in School System:


(a) Teachers in the Ipswich public schools at the time of the acceptance of this schedule will be placed upon the schedule on the basis of their present preparation and salary.


(b) Regular teachers who, at the time of the acceptance of this schedule, are receiving less than they would receive had this schedule of increments been operative may be advanced at the rate of $100 per annum, until they have reached the maximum to which their prep- aration, their experience and the quality of their in- service study entitles them. Teachers will not be ad- vanced on the schedule, however, unless or until they have taken the courses they would have been required to take had this schedule been operative; except that for purposes of interpreting this section teachers with 15 or more years of experience on January 1, 1948, will be considered to have fulfilled the requirements for one Period. Courses successfully taken for credit prior to the acceptance of this schedule will be given the valuation placed upon them by the institutions which offered the courses up to the maximum in the teacher's present classification. Courses which have not been evaluated in terms of semester college hours will be evaluated roughly on the basis of 19 classroom hours as the equivalent of one college credit.


26


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


(c) Teachers who are receiving less than they would re- ceive had this schedule been operative during their term of teaching may be advanced on this schedule with accelerated increments of $200 per annum if during the three year period immediately preceding the acceptance of this schedule they have taken (or if subsequent to the acceptance of the schedule they do take) college credits sufficient to qualify them for advancement from one Period to the next higher on the schedule.


(d) Accelerated increments may be given up to the maxi- mum in the next higher Period or up to the maximum which the teacher would have received had this sched- ule been operative, whichever is the lesser amount.


(e) Teachers who (subsequent to the acceptance of this schedule ) complete the credits necessary for the ac- celerated increments may be considered eligible for the accelerated increments on September 1 following the successful completion of such necessary credits.


12. Sick Leave: Each teacher in the Ipswich public schools shall be allowed 10 days' absence in any one year for reasons of personal illness only. This sickness leave shall be cumulative to 30 days. Accumulation shall begin with tenure of office but shall be retroactive to the beginning of service.


13. Contracts shall be issued in April of each year in ac- cordance with the Rules and Regulations of the School Com- mittee. All increments granted in any one year become effec- tive September 1, which means at the beginning of the school year.


27


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


14. Salaries may be paid in twenty or twenty-four equal payments as the teacher chooses, but any change in the pay- ment plan will be made only on January 1, of any year.


ELASTIC CLAUSES


1. The salary schedule shall be the basis on which all teachers new to the system shall be employed. The School Committee reserves the right, however, to place a teacher at any initial salary which, in its judgment, is advisable. The teacher, having accepted the initial salary, will proceed on the schedule according to its general provisions.


2. The School Committee may on the recommendation of the superintendent increase the basic salary of any teacher to compensate for the assumption of additional responsibilities.


28


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


SCHOOL CALENDAR


1947 - 1948


School Opens - Wednesday, September 3, 1947.


School Closes - Tuesday noon, December 23, 1947, Christ- mas holidays.


School Opens - Monday, January 5, 1948.


School Closes - Friday, February 20, 1948 to Monday, March 1, 1948.


School Closes - Friday, April 16, 1948 to Monday, April 26, 1948.


Elementary Schools close for summer holiday - Friday, June 11, 1948.


High School closes for summer holiday - Thursday, June 17, 1948.


School opens for school year 1948-1949 - Wednesday, Sep- tember 8, 1948.


OTHER HOLIDAYS


Monday, October 13, 1947 - Columbus Day.


Friday, November 7, 1947 - Essex County Teachers' Con- vention.


Tuesday, November 11, 1947 - Armistice Day.


Thursday and Friday, November 27 and 28 - Thanksgiving.


Friday, March 26, 1948 - Good Friday.


Monday, May 31, 1948 - Memorial Day.


29


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


RANKING PERIODS


1st Quarter begins Wednesday, September 3; ends Thurs- day, November 6 - 46 days.


2nd Quarter begins Monday, November 10; ends Friday, January 23 - 44 days.


3rd Quarter begins Monday, January 26; ends Friday, April 2 - 44 days.


4th Quarter begins Monday, April 5; ends Elementary, Friday, June 11 - 44 days; High, Thursday, June 17 - 48 days.


30


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


EMPLOYMENT CERTIFICATES ISSUED TO MINORS


1943


Age 14-16


16-18


18-21


Total


Boys


36


56


39


131


Girls


19


113


61


193


Total


55


169


100


324


1944


Boys


42


82


19


143


Girls


40


66


33


139


Total


82


148


52


282


1945


Boys


29


44


12


85


Girls


16


40


60


116


Total


45


84


72


201


1946


Boys


14


44


34


92


Girls


7


38


92


137


Total


21


82


126


229


1947


Boys


6


14


33


53


Girls


7


30


59


96


Total


13


44


92


149


31


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


GENERAL ANNOUNCEMENTS


Meetings of the Committee:


Regular meetings of the School Committee are held on the second Friday of each month at the Office of the Superin- tendent - Ipswich High School at 7:30 p.m.


Entrance Age :


No child shall be admitted to school in September unless he has reached the age of six on or before the thirty-first of March following the opening of school.


Birth Certificates :


A birth certificate is required for entrance to the first grade.


Vaccination :


No child shall be allowed to enter the first grade without a certificate of successful vaccination. Quotation from State Law, Chapter 76, Section 16: "An unvaccinated child shall not be admitted to a public school except upon presentation of a certificate like the physician's certificate required by Section 182, of Chapter 3."


Employment Certificates :


No child may be employed in any mercantile occupation until he has reached the age of sixteen years. All minors be- tween the ages of sixteen and twenty-one must procure an Employment Certificate before accepting a job in a mercantile occupation.


The employment certificates are issued every week-day at the office of the Superintendent of Schools.


32


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


GRADUATES OF IPSWICH HIGH SCHOOL, 1947


College Course


Lucille Ann Bailly


*Anne Elizabeth Barry John Frederick Benedix Austin Byrne Conley


* Alfreda Florence Cuik


*Renata Louise Gilmore Eleanor Jewett Haley Louise Story Hodgkins Theodora Mary Kisiel


*Barbara Louise Lane


Eva Frances Miller


Marie Anita Morin


Marie Annette Morin


Phyllis Marion Mozdziez . Carol Parsons


*Ruth Lois Pickard


*Priscilla Ross


*Gary Paul Somers


*Priscilla Ann Waranowski


*Geraldine Ann Weagle


Commercial Course


Mary Elizabeth Amerio Eleanor Frances Boudreau


Jennie Viola Chmura


Nancy Lorraine Fitch


Catherine Galanis


Cecilia Malvina Kaszuba


*Virginia Lee MacKenney Jean Emmaline Morgan Georgia Pappamihiel Charlotte Frances Szajewka


Winifred Mary Tobias


General Course


Gerald Kenneth Adams Walter Alden Babcock


Louis John Bartnicki


Horace Linwood MacKenney, Jr.


Theresa Marie Beaulieu Avis Lorraine Bell


Frieda Ann Mackiewicz Nicholetta Markos Alida Louise Martel


Lucille Thelma Benjamin Robert William Benjamin Ruth Mary Brown


Robert Russell McPhail


Patricia Maureen Moynahan


Richard Eugene Caldarone


Thomas Dennis Moynahan


Samuel Odello Chouinard


Demetra Pardekas


Frederick Wendall Courage Doris Eileen Dorr Frederick William Fulle, Jr.


Donald Francis Player Edna Louise Poirier


Nicholas Georgakopoulos


Ralph Glenburn Hatt, Jr.


Alfred Walter Prisby Elizabeth Monica Prisby Joseph Wilbur Reilly Marion Schwartz George Alfred Singer Richard Francis Somers William Speliotes


Betty Elaine Hood Howard Henry Hood, Jr. Jean Elizabeth Hornby Donald Philip Hovey Lucille Lee Hoyt John George Karalias


Dorothy Georgia Taylor


Christine Tsoutsouris


Edward Paul Kozeneski Paul Charles Lampropoulos


Roberta May Watts George Edward Weagle


Barbara Grace Wilson


*Honor Group


Ruth Virginia Lindgren Joy Lorraine Lippoldt


33


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


LIST OF TEACHERS IN IPSWICH


PUBLIC SCHOOLS


HARRY S. MERSON, Superintendent


High


Ralph C. Whipple, Principal


E. Margaret Allen Helen J. Blodgett


John J. Bochynski


Helen M. Brown


Robert D. Burgess


Frances D. Cogswell


Lucy A. Hill


Ruth A. Lord


Victoria A. Machaj


Hazel E. Manzer


Robert W. Moore


Elizabeth G. Nitardy


Frederick P. Pickard


Joseph V. Riley


Marion F. Whitney


Miriam R. Woolley


Burley


Nellie T. Smith, Principal


Ruth M. Brown Margaret I. Chisholm


Anne E. Friend


Ruth Gilday


Cecilia Z. Mackenzie


Elizabeth C. Weare


34


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


Shatswell


Augusta A. Grenache, Principal


Ethel M. Archer Mary L. Bamford


Ruth F. Joyce Blanche L. Oxner


Mary Bond


Hilda J. Schofield


Winthrop Lena J. Atherley, Principal


Grace A. Bowlen


Jennie A. Montevelis


Bette G. Chittick


Josephine T. Moyer


Blanche E. J. Leighton


Margaret M. Phelan


Amy Stanford


Frank H. Chadbourne, Art Supervisor


Arthur H. Tozer, Music Supervisor Frank L. Collins, M.D., School Physician Beatrice E. Collins, R.N., School Nurse Frederick C. Wilder, D.M.D., School Dentist Thomas G. Gauld, Attendance Supervisor


Janitors


Albert G. Waite High School


Mary W. Scott


High School


J. Francis Perkins Winthrop School


Arthur H. Grant


Burley School


Warren E. Grant Shatswell School


35


IPSWICH SCHOOL REPORT


INDEX TO SCHOOL REPORT


Page


Department Organization


3


Committee's Report


4


Superintendent's Report


4


Changes in personnel


4


Teacher's Salary Schedule


6& 22


High School Courses


10


High School Parent's Night


12


Elementary Schools


13


Summer Playground Program


15


State Aid For Education


16


Comparative Statement School Dept. Expenditures 18


Membership by Age and Grade


20


Distribution of Pupils


21


School Calendar 28


Employment Certificates


30


General Announcements


31


Graduates-High School


32


List of Teachers 33


INDEX


PART I: - TOWN REPORT


Town Officers Elected 5


Town Officers appointed


7


Town Accountant's Report


13


Receipts 13


21


General Government


24


Accountant 25


Aid to Dependent Children, etc.


41-42


Assessors


26


B. S. Cable Memorial Hospital 44


Balance Sheet 56


Bounty on Seals


37


Cemeteries


Chapter 90, Construction 1946 Contract


53 38


Chapter 90, Construction 1947 Contract


Chapter 90, Maintenance


Clam Commissioner


Contributory Pension System


Cowles, H. A., Memorial Cemetery


Crane, R. T., Picnic


Debt Accounts


Education


45


Election and Registration


28 49


Federal Works Agency Survey and Plans


51


Fire


30


Fire Alarm System North Bridge Road 31


Fire Damage Manual Training School 46


53 52 58


Federal Housing Project


38 38 34 50


Payments


Forest Warden


General Accounts Balance Sheet


Health


Highways


Honor Roll


Interest and Maturing Debt


Law


Library


Manning School Grading


Maturing Debt


Memorial Building


Memorial Day


Moderator


Mosquito Control


Moth


North Ridge Road


Old Age Assistance Administration


Old Age Assistance Assistance


Parks


· Pensions


Playgrounds


Playground Recreation Program


Poison Ivy Control 33 Police 29 Premium on Loans 54 Public Welfare 41 Scholarship, Eunice Caldwell Cowles 46 45


Schools and Libraries


Selectmen


24


Sewerage Committee


36


Shellfish Benefits 34


Snow Removal 38


Soldiers' Graves 54


Street Lighting 40


Town Ambulance 31


Town Clerk 27


33 56


35 37 51 54 27 47 46 55 49 51 24 37 32 40 42 42 47 50 48 48


Town Clock 50


Town Dump 36 Town Dump Construction 56 Town Hall Town Wharf Float 28 52 Treasurer and Collector 25 Tree Warden 33 59 Trust and Investment Accounts Unpaid Bills 1946 50 43


U. S. Grant Aid to Dependent Children


U. S. Grant Old Age Assistance Adm. 43 43


U. S. Grant Old Assistance, Assistance


Veterans Service 44


Walters Snow Fighter 40


Weights and Measures 32


Wildlife Refuge Project 27


Report of State Audit 61


DEPARTMENT REPORTS :


Assessor's Report 131


Board of Health 165


Clam Commissioner 163


Communicable Disease Reporter


171


Fire Department


147


Forest Warden


150


Inspector of Animals


176


Inspector of Slaughtering


175


Inspector of Wires


119


Inventory of the Cemetery Department


188


Jurors, List of 190


Milk Inspector 174


Moth Superintendent 151


Park Commissioners 155


Playground Committee 158


Police Department 141


Recapitulation 1947 132 Reconciliation of Treasurer's Cash 121


Rubbish Collection 169 Sanitary Agent 172


Sealer of Weights and Measures 160


Selectmen's Report 113


Superintendent of Streets 177


Superintendent of Cemeteries


186


Table of Aggregates 133


Tax Collector's Report 124


Town Accountant's Statement 121


Town Clerk and Vital Statistics 135


Town Counsel 116


Town Forest Committee


157


Town Property, 1947


189


Town Treasurer


123


Tree Warden 153


Trust Fund Commissioners 73


Trustees of Memorial Building


184


Veterans Service 182


Welfare Board 179


FUNDS, TRUSTS, TRUSTEES' AND FEOFFEES' REPORTS


Town Accountants Report 75


Cemetery Trust Funds 84


Heard Fund of Ipswich Public Library 104


Treadwell Fund of Ipswich Public Library 106


George Spiller Fund of Ipswich Public Library 108


Feoffees of Grammar School 101


Burley Education Fund 98


Mrs. William G. Brown Fund 77


John C. Kimball Fund 79


Richard T. Crane, Jr., Picnic Fund


80


Eunice Caldwell Cowles Fund 76


Marianna T. Jones Fund


78


Martha I. Savory Fund


82,


Dow Boulder Memorial Fund


78


Elizabeth R. Lathrop Fund 105


Manning School Fund


99


Mark Newman Memorial Fund 79


Post War Rehabilitation Fund 82


Abby Newman Fund of Ipswich Public Library 109


Stabilization Fund 83


Brown School Fund 97


R. H. Manning Fund 100


Trust Fund Commissioners 76


PART II.


Water and Light Report


PART III.


School Report


Ipswich Run Bay 352/105 Ipswich


IPSWICH PUBLIC LIBRARY


3 2122 00166 125 9


TOFI


IPSWICH ROOM Bay Ipswich Public Library Ipswich, Massachusetts





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