FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   >>  
e, was organized in 1836. The Unitarian Church was organized in 1838. The First Methodist Episcopal Church was organized in 1839. The meeting-house they first occupied was on Park Street; it has been recently sold to the Grand Army of the Republic. The edifice they now occupy is on Walnut Street. [Illustration: REVERE RUBBER COMPANY.] The St. Luke's Episcopal Church and the First Congregational Church were organized in 1841. The First Universalist Church was organized in 1842. The Central Congregational Church was organized in 1843, under the name of Winnisimmet. The St. Rose Catholic Church was organized in 1849. The Mount Bellingham Methodist Episcopal Church was organized in 1853. The Cary-avenue Baptist Church was organized in 1859. The Third Congregational Church was organized in 1877. [Illustration: T.H. BUCK & BROTHER'S LUMBER YARD.] The importance of education for the children was recognized at an early date by the settlers of Winnisimmet and Rumney Marsh. Brother Oliver may have given instruction; Thomas Cheever certainly did, and for his services received twenty pounds per annum from the town of Boston, as shown by the vote of January 24, 1709. In 1833, the town of Chelsea was divided into three districts, known as the Ferry, Centre, and Point. In 1834, Point Shirley district was set off from the Point; and in 1838 the northern district was set off from the Centre. The school committee, first elected in 1797, made their first written report in 1839; their first printed report in 1841. The first schoolhouse in Ferry district was built in 1833, near the corner of Chestnut Street and Washington Avenue. [Illustration: BOSTON RUBBER COMPANY, WINNISIMETT STREET.] In 1837, the Park-street schoolhouse was built, and the following year a grammar school was kept. In 1839, a primary school was started at Prattville. From the committee's report one is led to infer "that a stump with a piece of board on top for a seat, having no back attached, affords no enviable resting-place." In 1840, there were two primary schools in Ferry village, one occupying the site of the Pioneer newspaper office, the other near the corner of Shawmut Street and Central Avenue. The question of starting a high school was agitated in 1840, but no action was taken until 1845. In 1850, a high school building was erected on Second and Walnut Streets. In January, 1873, the present high school building, on Be
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   >>  



Top keywords:

Church

 

organized

 

school

 

Street

 

Congregational

 

report

 

Illustration

 
district
 

Episcopal

 

Avenue


Central
 

primary

 

corner

 

schoolhouse

 
Winnisimmet
 
committee
 

building

 

Methodist

 

January

 

Centre


RUBBER

 

Walnut

 

COMPANY

 

street

 
started
 

grammar

 

Washington

 
printed
 

written

 

Prattville


elected

 

northern

 

STREET

 

WINNISIMETT

 

BOSTON

 

Chestnut

 

question

 

starting

 
agitated
 

Shawmut


Pioneer

 

newspaper

 

office

 

action

 

Streets

 

present

 

Second

 

erected

 
occupying
 

schools