Cheshire Academy - Rolling Stone Yearbook (Cheshire, CT)

 - Class of 1941

Page 26 of 156

 

Cheshire Academy - Rolling Stone Yearbook (Cheshire, CT) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 26 of 156
Page 26 of 156



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Page 26 text:

Cheshire and other towns in Connecticut and New York attended the Academy. Between 1826 and 1836, the Academy suffered a decline, often referred to as “‘the dark age of the Academy.’’ There were three principals during that period. All the principals were clergymen and many of them also served as rectors of St. Peter’s Church in Cheshire. This distribution of time and effort naturally hurt the Academy and this custom was finally abandoned. With the Rev. Allen Morgan the institution began a renaissance which continued under the Rev. Dr. E. E. Beardsley, who introduced the boarding school system in 1838, and rose to great heights under the Rev. Sanford J. Horton, who became the Principal in 1862. Dr. Horton brought a number of students with him from Windham, Conn., and established at once a military regime which was at the time a great drawing card. The military aspect of the school continued for the next forty years. The school grew and prospered greatly during the thirty years that Dr. Horton was Principal. When the building that was used as a dormitory and Dr. Horton’s home was burned in 1873, he raised funds and built, in 1874, the building which was given the name of Horton Hall. This dormitory and administration building was in its turn destroyed by fire on the night of January 8, 1941. In 1892 Dr. Horton resigned to be succeeded for four years by the Rev. James Stoddard. Then in 1896, Professor Eri D. Woodbury, long an able helper to Dr. Horton, became the last Principal of the Episcopal Academy, end- ing his term in 1903. At that time the Trustees of the Diocese of Connecticut leased the school for ninety-nine years to the Trustees of the Cheshire School, Inc. The buildings were entirely renovated and the school placed on a thor- oughly modern basis. In 1917 the Cheshire School gave way to the Roxbury School, a tutoring organization which flourished until 1925 and which, in turn, began to expand and return to the traditional lines of the past. The link with the past was made secure when, on April 29, 1937, the former Roxbury School was granted a charter by a Special Assembly in Hartford, Conn., and the school at Cheshire became the Cheshire Academy. The present headmaster of the Academy, Mr. Arthur N. Sheriff, became the headmaster of the Roxbury School in 1922 upon the retirement of Mr. Walter L. Ferris on account of illness. Mr. Sheriff has seen the Academy through its various phases of aligning the old with the new and continuing the policies which have made the school at Cheshire one of the great and historic educational institutions of the nation.

Page 25 text:

“Such are the animating considerations to unite the hearts and strengthen the hands of those who have engaged in the work on which we have now assembled. Let them not be discouraged by any difficulties that may be thrown in their way,. but persevere to the end, resting assured that they will meet the approbation of every liberal and candid mind. Let them look forward unto the distant good they are about to promote,—the services they are rendering to society and re- ligion. And may the blessing of God succeed their undertaking; may His grace and Holy Spirit be our guide in the remaining parts of this solemnity, that de- cency and order may pervade our proceedings, and that this day furnish a useful lesson of instruction to all who are present—grateful to their memories and lasting as their lives.”’ The Constitution adopted was certainly a liberal one for the times. One article says that ‘‘Female Education may be attended to under this institution by such instructors and under such regulations as the Trustees shall direct,’’ and another article says, ‘‘No Laws of the Academy shall compel the students to attend public worship but at such place or places as their respective parents or guardians shall direct.”’ , Only thirteen of the thirty Cheshire men who gave their money for this Academy were Episcopalians. The first building, Bowden Hall, was completed in the autumn of 1796, at a cost of 702 Pounds, ‘‘lawful money.’ The first session opened at once with encouraging prospects. Dr. Bowden moved from Stratford to Cheshire and brought with him almost all the pupils who had attended his ‘‘academy”’ in Stratford. An average yearly enrollment of sixty students was reached and maintained. A liberal course of study was established such as ‘‘the English Language, Philosophy, Mathematics, and every other science taught at Colleges; likewise the dead languages, such as Greek and Latin. And whenever the finan- ces of the Academy will admit, the Trustees sha ll procure an instructor in the French Language, purchase a Library and Philosophical Apparatus, at their own discretion.’ After several petitions to the General Assembly to raise an endowment by means of a lottery had been rejected, the Legislature, in October, 1802, granted a lottery to raise the sum of $15,000. In April, 1802, Dr. Bowden had left the Academy to become a professor in Columbia College where he remained until his death on July 31, 1817. He was succeeded by the Rev. William Smith who, in 1805, witnessed the incorporation of the Academy by the Legislature of the State of Connecticut. Between 1810 and 1823, in accordance with the original intention of Bish- op Seabury, various attempts were made to secure for the Academy the power to confer degrees. In the latter year these attempts were abandoned when Trinity College, then called Washington, was granted a college charter. ‘This does not indicate that there was an active rivalry between the two institutions. On the contrary, there was a close connection between them. An alumnus of the Academy was one of the founders of Trinity College and afterward served as President there, and from the outset the two institutions shared members of the Boards of Trustees to the number of nine, while nine presidents of Trinity were either trustees, principals, or instructors in the Academy, and fourteen pro- fessors in the college were connected with the Academy, to say nothing of the many alumni of Trinity who had associations with the Episcopal Academy. The third Principal of the Academy was the Rev. Dr. Tillotson Bronson, for whom the second oldest building on the campus, (not built until 1866), was named. It was during his principalship that young ladies were admitted to the Academy. This was from 1806 to 1836, at which later date the Con- stitution was changed, making the school exclusively a boys’ school. However, during those thirty years of coeducation at Cheshire, over one hundred girls from



Page 27 text:

The Senior Class

Suggestions in the Cheshire Academy - Rolling Stone Yearbook (Cheshire, CT) collection:

Cheshire Academy - Rolling Stone Yearbook (Cheshire, CT) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 1

1930

Cheshire Academy - Rolling Stone Yearbook (Cheshire, CT) online collection, 1936 Edition, Page 1

1936

Cheshire Academy - Rolling Stone Yearbook (Cheshire, CT) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 1

1940

Cheshire Academy - Rolling Stone Yearbook (Cheshire, CT) online collection, 1943 Edition, Page 1

1943

Cheshire Academy - Rolling Stone Yearbook (Cheshire, CT) online collection, 1944 Edition, Page 1

1944

Cheshire Academy - Rolling Stone Yearbook (Cheshire, CT) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

1947


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