EARLY YOUNGSTOWN SCHOOLS.
THE ACADEMY.
STATE LAWS.
STATE THOROUGHLY ORGANIZED.
THE FIRST MEETING.
THE FRONT STREET SCHOOL.
[Pictures of:
IMMACULATE CONCEPTION SCHOOL, YOUNGSTOWN;
CITY HALL AND JAIL, YOUNGSTOWN;
WEST FEDERAL STREET, YOUNGSTOWN, LOOKING WEST;
ST. COLUMBA'S SCHOOL AND URSULINE CONVENT, YOUNGSTOWN]
RAYEN SCHOOL.
FREE KINDERGARTENS.
LUCRETIA K. BALDWIN MEMORIAL KINDERGARTEN.
BATHS.
Near the children's
entrance is a tile-lined bathroom. The kindergarten
children are bathed in the morning and after 4 o'clock p. m. it
is open to school children. Over thirteen hundred baths
were given during the last school year and over four hundred
during the summer vacation.
The second floor has a large lecture room, an overflow
kindergarten room, a trustees' room, a room for the cooking
class, and others.
DOMESTIC SCIENCE.
The trustees used part
of hte endowment fund to equip the cooking room. The
classes are limited to twelve, so each has her own set of
utensils and is given individual attention. A different
class meets each afternoon from 4 to 6 o'clock p. m.
Beside the individual equipment, there is a gas range for other
forms of cooking, a sink, ample cupboards and supplies.
MANUAL TRAINING.
The manual training
department is in the large, light basement. Mr. John A.
Logan, Jr., fitted this out with twelve benches and
all necessary tools. Two years ago classes were organized
by a teacher from Pratt Institute. They met from 4 to 6
p.m. , and accomplished good work. At present the work is
among younger children, but will eventually lead up to he bench
work again.
INDUSTRIAL SCHOOL.
A large sewing school
is held here every Saturday during the winter under the
direction of Miss Louisa M. Edwards.
The lecture room was used by a Boys' Club, which
met one winter with an attendance of between seventy and eighty.
It was held six evenings a week. During the first summer
vacation the building was used by the Council of Jewish Women
for classes and clubs organized among the poorer Hebrew
children.
VISITING NURSE.
One room in the
building is used by the Visiting Nurse Association, who have
their headquarters here. The building is used every
evening by the Boys' Club under the management of the Boys' Club
Association. They have evening classes in manual training,
also various kinds of games. The basement is finely
equipped with apparatus for a gymnasium. Shower baths will
soon be put in one room by the Club Association for the use of
the older boys.
PLAYGROUNDS.
The opening of the
playground was deferred until the past summer. There were
over a hundred children admitted each day and about sixty
present all the time.
FINANCIAL.
More funds were needed
to carry on the enlarged work and the Board of Education placed
four of the teachers and two janitors on the pay roll. A
little later a fund was made available through the township
trustees, who decided that what is known as the Shehy Fund could
be used for the kindergarten, as that alone stands for the
education of the poor. Such was the purpose of Mr.
Daniel Shehy when he made his will more than a quarter of a
century ago.
YOUNGSTOWN TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS.
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