Virginia School Report: Annual Report of the Superintendent of Public InstructionSuperintendent of Public Printing, 1901 - Education |
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Page xiii
... White ..... 6,587 6,637 Schools Opened ...... .. Colored ... 2,335 2,311 Total 8,922 8,948 White ...... 250,697 258,222 Pupils Enrolled .. Colored .... 119 898 123.339 Total . 370,595 381,561 White ..... 149,915 156,472 Pupils in ...
... White ..... 6,587 6,637 Schools Opened ...... .. Colored ... 2,335 2,311 Total 8,922 8,948 White ...... 250,697 258,222 Pupils Enrolled .. Colored .... 119 898 123.339 Total . 370,595 381,561 White ..... 149,915 156,472 Pupils in ...
Page xiv
... White males . 1,974 1,990 White females . 4,787 4,909 Total white . 6.761 6,809 Teachers ... Colored males .... 842 801 Colored females .. 1,351 1,398 Total colored ... Total white and colored . 2,193 2,199 8,954 9,008 Male teachers ...
... White males . 1,974 1,990 White females . 4,787 4,909 Total white . 6.761 6,809 Teachers ... Colored males .... 842 801 Colored females .. 1,351 1,398 Total colored ... Total white and colored . 2,193 2,199 8,954 9,008 Male teachers ...
Page xv
... white pupils ... Number used for colored pupils .. Seating capacity for white pupils .. Seating capacity for colored pupils ... Average number of acres of ground attached to each schoolhouse .... Š 5,383 5,516 1,879 1,901 288,572 ...
... white pupils ... Number used for colored pupils .. Seating capacity for white pupils .. Seating capacity for colored pupils ... Average number of acres of ground attached to each schoolhouse .... Š 5,383 5,516 1,879 1,901 288,572 ...
Page xvii
... White . Colored . Total . 1871 247,002 164,019 411,021 1873 253,411 170,696 424,107 1874 259,509 177,317 438,826 1875 280,149 202,640 482,789 1878 280,849 202,852 483,701 1880 314,827 240,980 555,807 1885 345,022 265,249 610,271 1888 ...
... White . Colored . Total . 1871 247,002 164,019 411,021 1873 253,411 170,696 424,107 1874 259,509 177,317 438,826 1875 280,149 202,640 482,789 1878 280,849 202,852 483,701 1880 314,827 240,980 555,807 1885 345,022 265,249 610,271 1888 ...
Page xviii
... White . Colored . Total . 1871 92,534 38,554 131,088 1872 119,641 46,736 166,377 1873 113,263 47,596 160,859 1874 121,789 52,086 173,875 1 1875 129,545 54,941 184,486 ! 1876 137,678 62,178 199,856 1877 139,931 65,043 204,974 I 1878 ...
... White . Colored . Total . 1871 92,534 38,554 131,088 1872 119,641 46,736 166,377 1873 113,263 47,596 160,859 1874 121,789 52,086 173,875 1 1875 129,545 54,941 184,486 ! 1876 137,678 62,178 199,856 1877 139,931 65,043 204,974 I 1878 ...
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Common terms and phrases
academic agriculture Alexandria County Amount due annual Arithmetic Assistant Professor attendance Balance Board of Visitors boys building cadets Captain cent Charlottesville Chemistry College colored cooking COUNTIES AND CITIES course Department district electric Engineering English enrolled Executive Committee expenditures supported expenses fees fourth classes Francis Mallory Fredericksburg Geography girls Give graduates Grammar Hampton History hospital hundred Institute Instructor interest JOSEPH W July June Laboratory Latin lectures Lynchburg manual training Medical methods military store Miss months Name Norfolk Norfolk County Normal School officers passed by Executive Peabody Peabody Education Fund Physics practical President Prof Public Instruction public schools pupils Randall building Richmond County Roanoke Roanoke County salary Scholarship second classes session sewing Sinking Fund SOUTHALL Southampton Staunton Summer Normal Superintendent of Public supported by vouchers taught teachers teaching tion Total tuition University University of Virginia Virginia Military Institute vouchers passed White William Williamsburg
Popular passages
Page xlii - Association," for the full period of twenty years, the purpose and objects of which are to elevate the character and advance the interests of the profession of teaching and to promote the cause of popular education in the United States...
Page lxx - ... to illuminate, as far as practicable, the minds of the people at large, and more especially to give them knowledge of those facts, which history exhibiteth, that, possessed thereby of the experience of other ages and countries, they may be enabled to know ambition under all its shapes, and prompt to exert their natural powers to defeat its purposes...
Page lxx - ... that, even under the best forms, those entrusted with power have, in time, and by slow operations, perverted it into tyranny ; and it is believed that the most effectual means of preventing this would be to illuminate, as far as...
Page 87 - If, then, you wish to insure the interest of your pupils, there is only one way to do it; and that is to make certain that they have something in their minds to attend with, when you begin to talk.
Page 94 - The question with me is, not whether you have a right to render your people miserable ; but whether it is / not your interest to make them happy. It is not, what a lawyer tells me I may do ; but what humanity, reason, and justice, tell me I ought to do.
Page lxxi - At every of those schools shall be taught reading, writing, and common arithmetick, and the books which shall be used therein for instructing the children to read shall be such as will at the same time make them acquainted with Graecian, Roman, English, and American history.
Page lxxiv - ... and whose parents are too poor to give them farther education, some one of the best and most promising genius and disposition, to proceed to the grammer school of his district ; which appointment shall be made in the court-house of the county, and on the court day for that month if fair, and if not, then on the next fair day, excluding Sunday, in the presence of the Aldermen, or two of them at...
Page lxxiii - ... hands and seals of the said jurors, together with the writ, to the clerk's office of the said county and the right and property of the said proprietors and tenants in the said lands so circumscribed shall be immediately divested...
Page xlvi - History, by apprising them of the past, will enable them to judge of the future; it will avail them of the experience of other times and other nations; it will qualify them as judges of the actions and designs of men...
Page lxxii - ... admit, without fractional divisions) an overseer shall be appointed annually by the aldermen at their first meeting, eminent for his learning, integrity, and fidelity to the commonwealth, whose business and duty it shall be, from time to time, to appoint a teacher to each school, who shall give assurance of fidelity to the commonwealth, and to remove him as he shall see cause ; to visit every school once in every half year at the least ; to examine the scholars ; see that any general plan of...