User:Eurodog/sandbox407
Brush College was a phrase in the Midwest used to denote an interant methods of study – the library consisting of books in saddlebags and sessions when older preachers met with younger ones seeking advice. Free public schools had not yet been established in Ohio; but the pioneer families maintained a subscription school for their children, and had built a primitive school edifice of logs, afterward widely known as "Brush College".
First pioneer school in Iowa
[edit]Isaac Galland, an Illinois doctor and lawyer who had established a settlement called National (now in Lee County), designed and built the first known pioneer school in the Iowa Territory in 1830. Iowa became a state December 28, 1846.
Brush College names
[edit]- Brush College, Murray, Iowa, founded in 1875.
- The Brush College schoolhouse, also called Madison Country School No. 5, operated from 1875 to 1952. The one-room schoolhouse, built in 1975, was located five miles north of Murray on Route 15, in Madison Township (contiguous on the north border of the Troy Township). After closing, the building was used as a voting place until the 1990s. On May 2, 1996, the Murray Community Resource Development, a non-profit community service orginization, moved the schoolhouse to Main Street in Murray, restored it, and continue to maintain it as a historical piece. The land on this origional location reverted back to the farm family that had originally owned it.
- Lillie Thomas (née Lillian M. Thomas; 1869–1955), who married Percival Hall Edmison (1844–1924) January 8, 1908, in Denver, was elected as County Superintendent of Schools for Clarke County, Iowa in 1895. She was re-elected in 1897.
- Lewis Clyde Smith (1876–1953), Superintent of Schools, Clarke County, Iowa[1]
Schools in Murray
[edit]As of July 1, 2020, the (a) East Union (EUCSD) and (b) Murray Community School Districts (MCSD) have shared the Superintendent. As of December 2021, Iowa had 327 public school districts, 104 of which had enrollments of 500 or fewer students, according to the Iowa Department of Education. EUCSD had 480 and MCSD had 269.[2] Tim Kuehl (né Timothy Gary Kuehl; born 1970) is superintendent. Effective August 23, 2024, the Boards of both districts, EUCSD and MCSD, approved a four-day school week with the aim of, among other things, improving teacher recruitment and retention, allowing more time for curricular planning, and improving student attendence.
Rural schools in Clarke County were reorganized in 1958 and became a part of Murray, Osceola, LeRoy, Grand River, Afton, New Virginia and Truro school districts. Four schools were kept open as a part of Clarke Community Schools in Osceola until the new high school was completed in 1961. The old high school then became the Junior High, and West Ward became the four-six grade school.
Consolidation of resources for rural schools
[edit]Iowa, state-wide public education history
[edit]In March, 1858, upon the recommendation of Maturin Lewis Fisher (1807–1879) – who, in April 1857, was elected State Superintendent of Public Instruction – the seventh General Assembly enacted that "each civil township is declared a school district," and provided that these should be divided into sub-districts. This law went into force March 20, 1858, and reduced the number of school districts from about 3,500 to less than 900. This change of school organization resulted in a very material reduction of the expenditures for the compensation of district secretaries and treasurers. An effort was made for several years, from 1867 to 1872, to abolish the sub-district system. Abraham Simpson Kissell (1829–1888), Superintendent from 1869 to 1872, recommended this in his report of January 1, 1872, and Governor Samuel Merrill forcibly endorsed his views in his annual message. But the Legislature of that year provided for the formation of independent districts from the sub-districts of district townships.[3]
Clarke County public education history
[edit]Past, early superintendents
[edit]- Mary A. Osmond (1843–1921). She was the first woman to hold the office in that county and among the first elected in the state.
- 1896–1899: Lillie Mae Thomas (1869–1955), as a Republican candidate, was elected as County Superintendent of Schools for Clarke County in 1895 – for the term January 1896 to January 1898. She was re-elected in 1897 – for the term January 1898 to January 1900. She married Percival Hall Edmison (1844–1924) in 1908.[4]
- 1913–1914; 1916–1917: Bessie B. Hart (1883–1968) was elected as County Superintendent of Schools for Clarke County, and served from 1913 to 1914. Hart was re-elected for another term in 1916. In 1921, she married Wid Orval Tillotson (1877–1975) who had been the widow of Emma L. Claver (maiden; 1876–1908), who he married in 1903.
History
[edit]The first reference to the office of Superintendent of Public Instruction appears to be in the year of 1840 while Iowa was still a Territory. Soon after the law of 1840 went into operation, the board of school inspectors divided the township into three school districts, known as School Districts Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4, and notice was given as required by law, for the organization by the voters of said districts into corporate bodies. In 1858 the Free School Act was passed by the Iowa legislature. This act allowed local property taxes to support the local schools. Because schools need money to operate, this act made it possible for schools to develop more quickly. This act also allowed for building one high school in each of Iowa’s 99 counties. A superintendent for each county was hired.
With the adoption of the Constitution and the admission of Iowa into the Union in 1846, the office of Superintendent of Public Instruction was re-established by provisions of the fundamental law. The people were now authorized to elect the head of the school system for a term of three years-while the definition of his powers and duties were left to tbe General Assembly. So, in the General Act of 1847, the school law of 1840 was amended and provided that at the next township election, a superintendent should be chosen whose duties should be the maintenance of an office at the seat of government-the keeping of documents, reports, etc. Also, he was charged with the care and distribution of school funds coming into his hands. In 1847, also, the Superintendent was empowered to appoint a deputy clerk and he was to compensate him out of his own salary, which was $1200. At the Spring Election of 1847, it appears that James Harlan (1820–1899) was elected the first Superintendent of Public Instruction.
Brush College
[edit]- Brush College, one-room school house at 330th Avenue (just north of 190th Street), Fort Madison, Washington Township, Lee County, Iowa. In 1877 land was purchased from Martha and William Richards to build a one-room brick building. At some point after 1935 someone built an enclosed front porch on the large top step that goes into the building.[5]
- Brush College, Wayne County, Iowa.
- Brush College, old, single room school, in Murray, Iowa.
- Brush College, – as early as 1860.
- Brush College, Jefferson Township, Warren County, Iowa – founded 1855.[6]
- Brush College, Franklin Township, Appanoose County, Iowa.
- Brush College, Section 29, Des Moines County, Iowa.
- Brushwood School #5, Doyle Township, Clarke County, Iowa
Illinois
[edit]- Brush College, Chicago
- Brush College No. 1, Decatur, Macon County, Illinois..
- Brush College No. 1, Macon County, Illinois.
- Brush College, District #49, Griggsville Township, Pike County, Illinois, property of T. S. Dimmitt. Its first term was held February 2, 1857, to April 4, 1857.
- Brush College, Stonington, Christian County, Illinois.[7]
- Brush College, Shafter Township, Fayette County, Illinois.[8]
- Brush College, Maroa, Macon County, Illinois.
- Brush College, 2 miles north of Murrayville, Morgan County, Illinois.[9]
- Brush College School No. 107, McLean County, Illinois, Gordon William Lillie (1860–1942) taught there in 1877 and 1878.[10]
Indiana
[edit]- Brush College, Perry Township, Allen County, Indiana.
- Forest College (1816–1830), Spencer County, Indiana. Denied the opportunity to attend an institution of learning higher than a subscription school, Abe Lincoln opened in the summer of 1827 what he called "Forest College." Soon his Pigeon Creek neighbors renamed it "Abe's Brush College."
Missouri
[edit]- Brush College School, Bates County, Missouri
- Brush College, LaBelle, Lewis County, Missouri. Located about six miles south of LaBelle at Junction 156 and Route D.
- Brush College, Grundy County, Missouri.[11]
- Brush College, Livingston County, Missouri.[11]
- Brush College, Mercer County, Missouri.[12]
Oregon
[edit]- Brush College Elementary, Salem, Oregon (active).
- Brush College, Polk County, Oregon, in the southeast part of the Eola Hills.
Ohio
[edit]- Brush College, Plain Township, Stark County, Ohio
- Brush College #1 – Section 26 SE Quarter – Established 3/14/1990
- Brush College #2 – Section 26 SE Quarter – Established 2/1/1959
Kansas
[edit]- Brush College, Marshall County, Kansas.[13]
Elsewhere
[edit]- Brush College, Gretna, Louisiana
Brush College School (–1931)
[edit]- The Forme Brush College school in Chillicothe, Missouri.[14]
- Vernon "Vern" Byron Sherman (1898–1991), a former pupil was interviewed. He lived on the farm where he had lived during his schooldays. His parents were William H. Sherman (1863–1935) and Mary Lillian Osborn (maiden; 1868–1953) who lived 1¼ miles southwest. He started in 1904 and his first teacher was Virgil Davis. Vern's son, Weldon William Sherman (1921–1964), also attended Brush College until it closed in 1931.
- Vern told an amusing incident about a former pupil, Elmer Hanson, when he went to Chicago seeking a job with some railroad company. He was asked if he had ever attended college and he informed them that he had, having Brush College in mind of course. He was given the job and worked for the company many years. Mr. Cunningham told how the school got its name. First, the brush part came from the fact it was located in a thicket of hazel brush, black and red haw trees. Then, advanced subjects were offered its pupils that were not commonly taught in the surrounding rural schools, such as higher mathematics, algebra, geometry, physics, ancient history, literature, and anatomy, hence the name – Brush College.[14]
Bibliography
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Jones & Parmenter, 1982, p. 161.
- ^ Mensching, April 2, 2022.
- ^ Clarke County History, July 1886.
- ^ Midland Schools, June–July 1897, p. 293.
- ^ Pen City Current, September 18, 2020, pp. 1 & 8.
- ^ Lockwood.
- ^ TopoQuest: Brush College, Christian Co.
- ^ MINDAT: Brush College, Fayette Co.
- ^ "Brush College", December 1916, p. 78.
- ^ Brigham, 1951, pp. 144–145.
- ^ a b Adams, 1928, p. 218.
- ^ Adams, 1928, p. 219.
- ^ Test.
- ^ a b Boone, July 10, 1958.
References
[edit]- Reeves, Winona Evans (née Emma Winona Evans; 1871–1955), ed. (1914). The Blue Book of Iowa Women – A History of Contemporary Women. Mexico, Missouri: Missouri Printing and Publishing Company. Retrieved May 27, 2024 – via Internet Archive.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: editors list (link) . LCCN 15-8570; OCLC 5521370 (all editions).
- "Miss Mary Osmond". 1914. pp. 173–174 – via Google Books. .
- Midland Schools. "Iowa Notes". Vol. 11, no. 10. Des Moines: Official Organ of the Iowa State Education Association. June–July 1897. p. 293. LCCN 00--304, LCCN 27--101; OCLC 1757427 (all editions).
- Schwengel, Frederick Delbert (1906–1993) (1945). The History of the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction in Iowa (PDF) (published under the authority of the House of Representatives of the Fifty-first General Assembly). Retrieved May 27, 2024.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) . OCLC 48491139 (all editions).
- Evans, Ralph Cloise (1910–1984) (1952). Improving Selected Aspects of the Instructional Program for the Rural Schools of Clarke County, Iowa (dissertation; Master of Science in Education). Des Moines: Drake University.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) OCLC 22993593 (all editions).
- Mason, Glenn O. (1952). Proposed Plan of Reorganization of the Schools in Clarke County, Iowa (dissertation; Master of Science in Education). Des Moines: Drake University. . OCLC 232187820 (all editions).
- "District Detail for Murray Community School District". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved November 12, 2021. NCES District ID: 1920100. .
- "Villages: Murray". Biographical and Historical Record of Clarke County, Iowa. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company. July 1886. OCLC 1041603305 (all editions), 865955909, 865939525, & 865955909.
- "Villages: Murray". pp. 525–531. Retrieved April 18, 2024 – via archive.org (Allen County Public Library, Fort Wayne, Indiana)..
- "Clark County Newspapers". Murray News (transcription). Retrieved April 18, 2024 – via The IAGenWeb Project. .
- "The Press". Murray News. pp. 488–489. Retrieved April 18, 2024 – via archive.org (Allen County Public Library, Fort Wayne, Indiana)..
-
Digital access:
- Mensching, Leah McBride (née Leah Renee McBride; born 1981; married to Ryan Christopher Mensching) (Apr 2, 2022). Muller, Lyle Edward (born 1953) (ed.). "List of Iowa Districts With 500 or Fewer Students". Iowa City: The Iowa Center for Public Affairs Journalism–IowaWatch.org. Distributed by Newstex, LLC. Retrieved May 22, 2024.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) ProQuest 2646000736 (US Newsstream database); OCLC 1329894847; OCLC 1035079117 (all editions).
- =====================================
- Creston News Advertiser: "Murray Schedules 4-Day School Week". Creston, Iowa: Shaw Media. March 31, 2023. Retrieved May 22, 2024. . OCLC 1097114012 (all editions).
- Pen City Current: Vandenberg, Charles ("Chuck") Raymond (1968– ) (September 17–18, 2020). "Bell Ringing Again at Brush College One-Room School". Fort Madison, Iowa: Market Street Publishing, LLC.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: date format (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) Retrieved May 22, 2024.
- Adams, Orvyl Guy (1902–1980) (1928). Place Names in the North Central Counties of Missouri. Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via University of Missouri.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) doi:10.32469/10355/69842; OCLC 1144631755 (all editions).
- Ruth, Amy, ed. (1994). The Goldfinch: Iowa History for Young People. "One Room Schools in Iowa" (quarterly Iowa history magazine for children, ages 8 to 13 – published from 1975 to 2000). Vol. 16, no. 1. Iowa State Historical Society. Retrieved May 22, 2024 – via Internet Archive. . ISSN 2372-6369 (online); ISSN 0278-0208 (print); ERIC ED380380; OCLC 60626099 (all editions).
- Aurner, Clarence Ray (1863–1948). History of Education in Iowa. Iowa City: State Historical Society of Iowa.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) Retrieved April 22, 2024. OCLC 1690178 (all editions).
- Host, Sandra Kessler (2011). Iowa's Rural School System, a Lost Treasure: The Key to Iowa's Rural Settlement Featuring Richland #1 School in Sac County, Near Odebol (published by the author & the Odebolt Historical Museum). Council Bluffs, Iowa.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) LCCN 2011-908892; ISBN 978-0-6154-3810-8, 0-6154-3810-5; OCLC 743472018.
- Host, Sandra Kessler (2012). Iowa’s Rural School System, a Lost Treasure : The Key to Iowa’s Rural Settlement Featuring Richland #1 School in Sac County, Near Odebolt (published by the author & the Odebolt Historical Museum) (2nd ed.). Council Bluffs, Iowa.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) ISBN 0-6156-1515-5, 978-0-6156-1515-8; OCLC 824800426.
- Host, Sandra Kessler (2011). Iowa’s Rural Settlement Shaped by Railroads and a System of Rural Schools (published by the author). (adaptation and curriculum components by Dorothy Kessler Engstrom). Council Bluffs, Iowa.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) LCCN 2011-915317; ISBN 978-0-6155-3152-6, 0-6155-3152-0; OCLC 757745421.
- Host, Sandra Kessler (2014). Iowa Historic Schools: Highlighting Victorian Influence (published by the author). Odebolt, Iowa.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) LCCN 2014-907326; ISBN 978-0-6922-0078-0, 0-6922-0078-9; OCLC 908192558.
- Host, Sandra Kessler (2015). A New Look at Iowa's One-Room Schools – Iowa's Lost Treasure – A System of 12,623 Rural Schools 1858–1966. Rural Lecacy Project, Odebolt, Iowa. Iowa Rural Schools Museum. Omaha: Standard Printing. Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via ISSUU. LCCN 2015-907332; ISBN 978-0-9862-0794-5, 0-9862-0794-2; OCLC 1101277601 (all editions).
- Boone, Mrs. Luther (née Bertha Ellen Pearson; 1891–1975), Wheeling, Missouri (July 10, 1958). "Brush College School History". Chillicothe Constitution-Tribune. Retrieved April 22, 2024.
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) .
- Mrs. Homer Lockwood; Mrs. Ethel Smith; Transcribed by Juanita Ott. "Brush College – School History". Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via Warren County, IAGenWeb Project.
- ERIC ED111754: "Discovering Historic Iowa" (American Revolution Bicentennial ed.). 1975. Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via Internet Archive. ERIC ED111754; OCLC 911438559.
- MINDAT: "Brush College School (historical), Township of Shafter, Fayette County, Illinois" (feature-4234610). Retrieved April 22, 2024.
- TopoQuest: United States Geological Survey (April 22, 2024). Taylorville, IL quadrangle, "Brush College". Christian County, Illinois (Topographic map). Reston, VA: United States Geological Survey. Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via TopoQuest.
- "Christian County, Illinois". Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via Genealogy Trails History Group.
- "Brush College". The Illinois Teacher. 5 (4): 78. December 1916. Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via Internet Archive. . OCLC 1752669 (all editions).
- Stringer, Lawrence Beaumont (1866–1942) (1937). One Hundred Years of Mount Pulaski, Illinois: 1836 – 1886 – 1936. Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via Internet Archive (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign).
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) OCLC 810281709 (all editions).
- Brigham, William Browning (1874–1959) (1951). The Story of McLean County and Its Schools. pp. 144–145. Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via Internet Archive (University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign).
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) .
- Schwieder, Dorothy (née Hubbard; 1933–2014) (1996). Iowa: The Middle Land. Ames, Iowa: Iowa State Press. Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via Internet Archive (Alibris).
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) LCCN 95-45200; ISBN 978-1-5872-9676-5, 1-5872-9676-4; ISBN 978-0-5851-1470-5, 0-5851-1470-6; OCLC 219756444 (all editions).
- Jones, Kathy; Parmenter (1982) [1995]. Historic Hopeville and Vicinity: 1850–1882. "Lewis Clyde Smith". Creston, Iowa: Quick Copy Publishing Company. LCCN 84-141457; OCLC 8841084 (all editions).
- Crawford, Effie Mabel (née Moffitt; 1928–2021) (1948). "Rural Schools of Clarke County". Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via Iowa Gen Web.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) .
- Sherman, William L., ed. (1998). Iowa's Country Schools: Landmarks of Learning. Iowa State Education Association. Parkersburg, Iowa: Mid-Prairie Books. Retrieved April 22, 2024 – via Internet Archive. LCCN 98-65957; ISBN 0-9312-0973-0.
Annals of Iowa
[edit]- Third Series (quarterly). LCCN 05-32209; ISSN 2473-9006 (online); ISSN 0003-4827 (print); OCLC 1481386 (all editions).
Marvin Lavon Bergman, PhD (1953– ), ed.
- Johnson, Keach Doyel, PhD (1910–1995) (April 1991). "Roots of Modernization: Educational Reform in Iowa at the Turn of the Century". Vol. 50, no. 8. pp. 892–918. doi:10.17077/0003-4827.9534.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) Retrieved April 23, 2024. OCLC 7790130184 (article).
Other
[edit]- Kirch, Claire (May 24, 2004). "Iowa Press Benefiting as Blackwell Publishing". Publishers Weekly. Vol. 251, no. 21. p. 23. Retrieved May 13, 2024. ISSN 0000-0019; EBSCOhost 13214539.
- Fletcher, Carol (February 8, 2007). "John Wiley Takes Over Blackwell Publishing". The Record. Vol. 112, no. 249. Hackensack, New Jersey: New Jersey Media Group. p. B3. Retrieved June 12, 1919. OCLC 1035031792 (all editions) (publication); OCLC 10806291 (all editions) (publication); ProQuest 426379382 (article) (US Newsstream database).