"This Fortunate District": Green School History

Welcome to Green School History, a site devoted entirely to the Green School in Middleborough, Massachusetts. Located on East Main Street in the Green section of Middleborough, the school was built in 1871 and was in continual use until June, 1941, when it was closed. Reopened for a short period of time in the 1990s, the Green School in 2009 was threatened with demolition. A group of concerned residents banded together to save this one-room schoolhouse. Thanks to the interest of the community supported by financial contributions by residents and former pupils, the building has been preserved and the exterior restored. A new use for the structure is currently under consideration. This site hopes to convey the immense historical and educational value which the Green School still retains, particularly its ability to speak to the educational history of the community of Middleborough.

The easiest way to navigate through the site is by using the left-hand sidebar. Click on the icons to read about some of the unique aspects of the Green School's history, to view pictures of the school and documents related to its history, or to make a contribution towards its preservation. Also, for a quick reference, you can also click on the chapters underneath each icon to go directly to a topic of interest.

Showing posts with label Pupils. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pupils. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Daily Routine

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Teachers in Middleborough were required to be present at least fifteen minutes prior to the commencement of school, both morning and afternoon. In the late 1800s, this requirement was shortened to ten minutes. Lessons for the day would have been prepared the previous afternoon or evening. Children arrived either on foot or, if lucky, by means of the farm wagon destined for town if “the trip might coincide with the time the children were to go to school.”

Because like most schools the Green School lacked a bell, the teacher rang a hand bell at the start of the day to call scholars to school. (The bell used at the Green from before 1861 through 1941 is now in the collections of the Middleborough Historical Museum). Students filed into the building using separate entrances. Hooks for coats and shelves for tin lunch pails were likely located immediately inside the entrance. “Clothing, that is outer garments such as coats, mufflers and leggings were hung on hooks outside the classroom door. Rubbers and rainboots or overshoes were placed at each side of your desk and under the metal leg support of the desk”, recalled one later Middleborough resident. Once inside the schoolroom, the children (at least in the early years of the school) were likely to have remained segregated by sex, the boys occupying one side of the schoolhouse and the girls the other.

Children were seated, sharing a double desk at the Green until 1904 when they were replaced with individual desks. Desks had “a slant top in which were kept the school books and any personal belongings [such as a pencil box]. Frequently the desks were made of oak and until the third grade there was a hole in the upper right corner. But when you entered the third grade you ‘grew up’ slightly” for at that stage students were permitted to write with pen and ink on paper and an inkwell filled the hole. (The inkwell could be a dangerous object. Frequently girls who wore their hair in pigtails might find them dipped into an inkwell by the mischievous boy behind her).

Typically, at the start of the day, an older boy would be delegated the responsibility of filling a water pail from either the Church of the Green or a willing neighbor which would be brought inside and left near the sink in the rear of the building. In winter, another would ensure that enough wood had been brought in to fuel the stove throughout the course of the day.

The first order of business was attendance. “The Roll shall be punctually called at the opening of each session, and each absentee shall be recorded at the time …”, stipulated the Middleborough School Committee in 1873.

“The morning services of the school shall commence with reading the Bible, and it is recommended that the reading be followed by some devotional service.” Like most schools of the era, those in Middleborough included a strong religious component, and the sessions were frequently referred to as “services” as in the foregoing quote. Moral instruction remained an important aspect of childhood education and the fact that Bible readings and moral lessons started off the day was an indication of their primacy within the school. Because of the importance of these services, pupils who were tardy were not permitted to enter the building at this time in order to avoid interrupting the “devotions.”

Following this, work by all ability levels commenced simultaneously. While some students read, others might work on copy books, while still others would perform blackboard work.

In order to reduce the chaos which could easily result in a classroom with so many students of varying abilities, teachers were urged to unite students in groups based upon their skill levels in each subject. “By the use of supplementary reading matter, and by the topical method in other subjects, classes representing different grades may be brought together.” Additionally, educators frequently urged alternation between oral and written recitations for students, partly in order to ground students in the fundamentals of each, partly to avoid monotony on the students part, and partly because written recitation work freed the teacher to concentrate on other students.

All students were provided with a 15 minute morning and a 15 minute afternoon recess, while primary pupils received an extra recess each half day. Teachers were barred from withholding recess from students as punishment. Though students might be detained in the classroom during regular recess, they were to be provided with the same length recess apart from the other students.”

Lunch was promptly at noon. Undoubtedly, the teacher ensured that each student had clean hands, and for this purpose soap and a rough washcloth would have been kept by the sink. In winter, lunch pails might be placed upon the heating stove in order to warm lunches.

The afternoon session mirrored that of the morning in regard to class work, lasting until 3.30 or 4 or in the afternoon.

Enrollment, Green School 1871-1941

Below are enrollment figures for the Green School taken from the Annual Town Reports. Various methods of reporting were used over the years, including total enrollment, average mebership and whole number of students attending, but the figures represented here provide a good picture of the number of students educated in the building.

1877 spring term 26
1877 fall term 31
1878 winter term 35
1878 spring term 31
1878 fall term 37
1879 winter term 33
1879 spring term 25
1879 fall term 26
1880 winter term 26
1880 winter term 28
1880 fall term 33
1881 winter term 32
1881 1st term 39
1881 2nd term 39
1881 3rd term 34
1882 1st term 25
1882 2nd term 29
1882 3rd term 25
1883 1st term 28
1883 2nd term 26
1883 3rd term 29
1884 1st term 27.9 (average)
1884 2nd term
1885 3rd term 36.8 (average)
1885 1st term 24
2nd term 26
3rd term 31
1886 1st term 27
2nd term 28
3rd term 29
1887 1st term 23
2nd term 29
3rd term 35
1888 1st term 26
2nd term 32
3rd term 27
1889 1st term 20
2nd term 30
3rd term 40
1890 1st term 27
2nd term 35
3rd term 36
1891 38
1892 43
1893 36
1894 44
1895 54
1896 52
1897 48
1898 38
1899 38
1900 36
1901 37
1902 39
1903 48
1904 44
1905 34
1906 44
1907 40
1908 30
1909 47
1910 47
1911 45
1912 44
1912 n/a
1912-13 n/a
1913 47
1913-14 51
1914-15 58
1915-16 58
1917 66
1918 60
1919 n/a
1920 37
1921 n/a
1922 n/a
1923 45
1923-24 47
1924-25 48
1925-26 52
1926-27 37
1927-28 n/a
1928-29 36
1929-30 37
1930-31 37
1931-32 39
1932-33 33
1933-34 27
1934 24
1934-35 22
1935-36 24
1936-37 22
1937-38 21
1938-39 28
1939-40 28
1940-41 15