Difference between revisions of "Knox School District No. 12"
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[[Image:School-12AltamontFair.jpg|400px|thumb|left|<center>Knox School #12</center>]] | [[Image:School-12AltamontFair.jpg|400px|thumb|left|<center>Knox School #12</center>]] | ||
[[Image:School-12PulliamFamily.jpg|400px|thumb|left|<center>Knox School #12 - Pulliam Family</center>]] | [[Image:School-12PulliamFamily.jpg|400px|thumb|left|<center>Knox School #12 - Pulliam Family</center>]] | ||
+ | [[File:KnoxSchool-12.pdf|400px|thumb|left|<center>Knox School #12 - Pulliam Family</center>]] | ||
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[[Category:Education]] | [[Category:Education]] |
Latest revision as of 00:49, 4 September 2015
From the booklet, Booklet Knox, New York Sesquicentennial, 1822-1972
The school of District No. 12, according to Hattie Barber, was known as the Van Benschoten School because the site for the building was donated by John Van Benschoten. Ina Lendrum Beebe remembers that her mother said that she was taken to the school during the 1890's by her teacher, Simeon Stevens, who stopped at the house for her. Apparently, the school was built before 1886 inasmuch as Tenney and Howell report statistics for that year: 22 children of school age, 10 children enrolled, and an average attendance of four. The school was valued at $400 and its library contained 78 books.
Among other teachers in the district were: Libby and Lucy Osborne, Foster Warrick, Amy Swartz, Agnes Monahan, John B. Appell, Katherine Simmons, Elmer Saddlemire, and Mrs. Patrick Spadardo.
After the district was incorporated into the Berne-Knox system, the schoolhouse of District 12 was moved to the Altamont Fairgrounds where it continues to perpetuate the memory and the substance of the one-room school
See Bozenkill School