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BIBLIOGRAPHY

CUBBERLEY, ELLWOOD PATTERSON. Public Education in the United States. (A study and interpretation of American educational history). Rev. and enl. Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1934. 782 p. illus.

DEXTER, EDWIN GRANT. History of Education in the United States. New York, The Macmillan Co., 1904. 656 p.

EBY, FREDERICK and ARROWOOD, C. F.

Development of Modern Education in

Theory, Organization, and Practice. New York, Prentice-Hall, 1934.

922 p.

ELSBREE, WILLARD S. The American Teacher. New York, American Book Co., 1939. 566 p.

JOHNSON, CLIFTON.

Old-time Schools and School-books. New York, The 381 p. illus.

Macmillan Co., 1904.

JONES, OLGA and others. Education in the United States of America. Washington, D. C., U. S. Office of Education, Bulletin 1939, Misc. No. 3.

KNIGHT, EDGAR WALLACE. Education in the United States. New ed. New York, Ginn & Co., 1934. 613 p.

MEYER, A. E. The Development of Education in the Twentieth Century. New York, Prentice-Hall, 1939.

406 p.

MONROE, PAUL. Founding of the American Public School System. (A history of education in the United States from the early settlements to the close of the Civil War period). Vol. I. New York, The Macmillan Co., 1940. 520 p.

SKINNER, CHARLES E. and LANGFITT, R. E.

New York, D. C. Heath & Co., 1937.

Introduction to Modern Education. 491 p.

WOODY, THOMAS. History of Women's Education in the United States. Lancaster, Pa., Science Press, 1929.

658 p.

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APPENDIX

Chronological table of significant events in American public education

1621. Earliest attempt to establish a school in the Colonies.
1635.-First Latin grammar school in America established in Boston.

1636. Harvard College founded in Massachusetts.

1642.

Massachusetts Law of 1642, first law requiring education of children. 1647. Massachusetts Law of 1647, requiring that schools be supported by every community of 50 families or more.

1719. Hodder's Arithmetick, the first separate English textbook of arithmetic published in the New World.

1783.-Noah Webster's blue-backed speller for children published.

1785. Continental Congress passed the Ordinance of 1785 for the Northwest Territories to set aside the sixteenth lot in every township for schools. 1789.-Constitution of the United States adopted.

1791. Tenth Amendment to the Constitution allowing the States to provide their own education.

1806.-Lancastrian monitorial system introduced in a school in New York City. Gideon Hawley became the first State superintendent of schools.

1813.

1818. The Academician, the earliest known educational journal published in this country, started.

1821. First free public high school in America established.

1821. Troy Seminary, a school for the higher education of women, founded by Emma Willard.

1823. First teacher-training school in America founded by Rev. Samuel R. Hall. 1827.-Massachusetts Act of 1827 requiring the establishment of high schools in all towns having 500 families or more, passed.

1837.-First State board of education in the United States created in Massachusetts. Horace Mann became its first secretary.

1839. First public normal school opened at Lexington, Mass.

1855.-Henry Barnard began editing his famous American Journal of Education. 1862. President Lincoln signed the first Morrill Act.

1867.-United States Department of Education (now called the U. S. Office of Education) established by Congress.

1890.-Second Morrill Act passed.

1917.-Congress passed the Smith-Hughes Vocational Act.

1936.-George-Dean Act for vocational education passed by Congress. 1939.-U. S. Office of Education transferred from the U. S. Department of the Interior to the Federal Security Agency.

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