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Contents for September-1880.

PORTRAIT OF FREDERICH AUGUST FROEBEL,.

609

I. PIONEERS IN THE HIGHER EDUCATION OF WOMEN-Continued, 611-624 MISS Z. P. GRANT-MRS. WILLIAM BANISTER,..

1. Birth-place-Early Home and School Education-Teaching,.
2. Female Seminary in Derry, N. H., and Ipswich, Mass.,.
II. PUBLIC INSTRUCTION IN ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI,.
1. Origin and Growth of Public Schools from 1839 to 1855,.
2. Development under Superintendent Harris - Memoir,.
3. Birds'-eye View of System-Statistics for 1880.....
III. CONTRIBUTIONS TO A MEMOIR OF FROEBEL,.

1. PRINCIPAL EVENTS CHRONOLOGICALLY ARRANGED,.
2. LETTER OF FROEBEL TO DUKE OF MEININGEN,
8. Contents of Collected Writings,...

IV. FROEBEL'S EDUCATIONAL VIEWS.-Continued,.

611

613

619

625-640

628

......

633

640 641-672 641

.... 643.

670

673-704

THE CHILD-Nature and NuRTURE. By Baroness Marenholtz-Bulow,... 673 10. CHILD'S RELATIONS TO MANKIND...................

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X. AMERICAN KINDERGARTEN PAPERS,.

2. Mann-American Charity Kindergarten,.....

V. TEACHING ORDERS IN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH,..

I. THE ORATORIANS: FATHERS OF THE ORATORY. By Compayre,....
Founder-General Aim and Spirit of the Congregation,...
Studies-Subject-Methods-Discipline-Results,.

II. THE CHRISTIAN BROTHERS,.......

III. THE PIARISTS AND THEIR FOUNDER,..

Joseph Casalanz-Free Schools in 1597,............

1. THE SCHOOLE AND COLLEDGE AT NEWETOWNE,.
Nathaniel Eaton, the Passionate Professor,..

Mrs. Eaton's Experience in College Commons,.

2. THE GRAMMAR SCHOOL AT CAMBRIDGE AND CHARLESTOWN,
Elijah Corlett-Benjamin Tompson..

8. THE COMMON SCHOOL AT CAMBRIDGE,.

4. THE COLLEGE AT CAMBRIDGE,

Earliest Rules as to Admission, Study, and Discipline,. Requirements for Degrees-Three Years' Course of Study,. First Commencement-Theses philological and philosophical,. VII. THE ACADEMY-INCORPORATED AND ENDOWED,. 1. Earliest Application of Name to a School for Youth,. 2. HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT-MASSACHUSETTS,

VIII. TREATMENT OF NEGLECTED CHILDREN,

1. VOLUNTARY WORK OF A PASTOR IN WURTEMBERG,.
2. STATE PRIMARY SCHOOL IN MICHIGAN,.
CANTONAL REFORM FARM SCHOOLS,.

3.

IX. COMPULSORY SCHOOL ATTENDANCE,.

By Lange, Diesterweg, Miss Blow, Miss Peabody, and others,.

1. Lange-Reminiscenses of Fræbel and his Work,.

8. Blow-The Mother Play and Nursery Song,.

705-736

705

706

709

729

736

736

737-800

737

737

740

743

745

752

753

753

754

756

761-808

761

763

809-816

809

812

814

817-832

833-910

833

833

846

849

4. Pestalozzi and Froebel-Natural Objects and Home Activities,..

......870

5. Peabody- Fræbel's Principles in American Public Schools,.

873

6. Aldrich-Notes of Visits to Madame Schrader's Kindergarten,..

881

7. Lyschinska - A German Kindergarten in Berlin,

889

8. Diesterweg-Objects of Intuitional Teaching,....

895

9. Marwedel and others- Kindergarten Work in California,..

897

10. Bushnell and others - Importance and Method of Early Training,....

905

XI. EDUCATIONAL PUBLICATIONS,............

911

MISS Z. P. GRANT-MRS. WILLIAM B. BANISTER.

BY REV. JOHN P. COWLES.

MEMOIR.

ON Chestnut Hill in South Norfolk, in a square brown house of one story, with a kitchen, a parlor, two bedrooms at opposite corners, and a lighted entry on the street, May 30, 1794, was born to Joel and Zilpah Cowles Grant a child destined for a work in the education of women second in quality to none of the kind hitherto done in this land or any other. The plain house long ago burned to the ground, where this child first saw the light, stood near the summit of the hill, half a mile north of the Grantville station on the Connecticut Western railroad, and five or six rods south of a square turn which takes the traveler eastward to the Hartford and Albany turnpike, a mile and a half distant. Southward and westward the spot commanded a large and goodly prospect of hill and dale, farm-house, field and forest, mills and mill stream, whose waters rushing down a gulfy slope yielded a perpetual monotone, save in springtime and rain storms when the roar was nothing short of sublime. Hard by to the north-west slept and still sleeps a beautiful pond, with a treacherous bog on the north, and at the south an outlet, whose streams supplied music and served a grist and a saw mill before reaching a confluent near the present railroad station. The historic period of this pond had not been long enough for a fancy name, but it might have been called Grant's Pond, from the four Grant brothers, who with their well filled families, children and parents not less than thirty, lived near it within gun-shot of each other. Tradition delivers that these Grants were of the Windsor stock, and came thence to Norfolk in the earlier emigrations after the middle of the last century. Many of these Grants were strongly marked with the Scotch grit and toughness which so lately and so justly have made the name a household word for the world. Several, besides the subject of this sketch, were also marked with intellectual grace and strength which might have fitted them to work and shine, as she did, in the higher domain of mind.

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