hide Matching Documents

The documents where this entity occurs most often are shown below. Click on a document to open it.

Document Max. Freq Min. Freq
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 26. 3 3 Browse Search
View all matching documents...

Your search returned 3 results in 2 document sections:

Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 26., History of the Medford High School. (search)
er 2, 1872, to November 26, 1873. Charles S. Bachelder (Harvard, 1873), from December 1, 1873, to April 6, 1874. Frederic T. Farnsworth (Tufts, 1873), from April 8, 1874, to June 30, 1876. Miss Carrie A. Teele, from September 6, 1875, to June 30, 1876; also, from September 1, 1888. Edward P. Sanborn (Dartmouth, 1876), from September 1, 1876, to April 9, 1877. Leonard J. Manning (Harvard, 1876), from April 16, 1877. Miss Caroline E. Swift, from September 1, 1877. Miss Genevieve Sargent, from September 1, 1881. Stephen Emery (Boston University, 1890), from September, 1890, to June 24, 1892. Miss Annie M. Sawyer (Wellesley, 1889), from September 14, 1891, to June 24, 1892. Miss Josephine E. Bruce, from September 13, 1892. Miss Carrie W. Whitcomb, from September 13, 1892. It will be observed that, except for twenty-three weeks in 1839, no assistant was appointed till May, 1841; also that there was none from August 26, 1849, to April 1, 1851. During thi
Medford Historical Society Papers, Volume 26., The Medford High School under Lorin L. Dame (search)
Latin or French was compulsory. The Committee now conceded the advantage of an all-English course, but maintained this would be impossible without a female assistant, whose salary need not be larger than six hundred dollars, and in 1882 Miss Genevieve Sargent appeared. It is pleasant to find, in every school report, year after year, that the work of the four teachers was appreciated by the Committee. The Committee feel that the town is to be congratulated upon being able to retain the presen. During the years when the new school was in the building, Mr. Charles H. Morss began his wide and farsighted work for the city as superintendent, while in the school Miss Sara A. Clapp, the dean of the high school, took the place of Miss Genevieve Sargent and continued the fine tradition of Medford teachers in long devoted service to the city. In 1896 the ninth grade was also installed in the new high school, to relieve the pressure in the fast-growing city. With the removal of the pup