English: Flushing High School, New York City.
Identifier: illustratedflush00rich
Title: Illustrated Flushing and vicinity : College Point, Broadway-Flushing, Malba-on-the-Sound, Whitestone, Bayside, Douglaston, Little Neck in the third wa
Year: 1917 (1910s)
Authors: Richardson, Darby.
Subjects:
Publisher: [Flushing, N.Y.] : Darby Richardson
Contributing Library: Columbia University Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: The Durst Organization
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19 The PUBLIC SCHOOLS of FLUSHINGAND VICINITY By JOHN HOLLEY CLARK, Principal Flushing High School FLUSHING has always been noted for the excellence of its schools.Early in its history its private schools were celebrated. The mostprominent of these was the Flushing Institute, on Main St., incharge of Elias A. Fairchild and Allen P. Nothrup, whose memory isfondly cherished by a host of men in or past middle life, who annuallyhold a banquet, which is largely attended, and where old school daysare recalled and old friendships more firmly cemented. Later, freepublic schools were established and Flushing fortunately had as super-intendent and principals a line of famous educators, including Thomas
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New Flushing High School F. Harrison, Nelson J. Gates and Sherman Williams. Flushing had thedistinction of being the first school district in the State to abolish tuitionfees, and make its common schools free. It was also a pioneer in thefield of High School education. The Flushing High School was estab-lished by act of the Legislature in 1875 and preceded by a period of18 years the recognition as a High School of any similar institution inthe city, by the Regents of the University of the State of New York.Following Flushing, the next high school in the present city to beofficially recognized by the Regents was the Jamaica High School in1893. Flushings first Board of Education, authorized by a special actof the Legislature in 1848 and named in the bill, consisted of EffinghamH. Lawrence, Edward E. Mitchell, Samuel B. Parsons, William H.Fairweather and Thomas Leggett, Jr. Prior to the erection in 1873 ofwhat is now known as P. S. 20, all the pupils in Flushing were accom-modated in a w
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