Holyoke High School - Annual Yearbook (Holyoke, MA)

 - Class of 1939

Page 28 of 216

 

Holyoke High School - Annual Yearbook (Holyoke, MA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 28 of 216
Page 28 of 216



Holyoke High School - Annual Yearbook (Holyoke, MA) online collection, 1939 Edition, Page 27
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Page 28 text:

cial, or religious. One of his great delights was The Clubv of which he was a char- ter member. This club brought him into contact with men of such varied interests as those of William F. Whiting and William Skinner, the founders of their respec- tive families here in Holyoke, with Mr. H. B. Lawrenceg Dr. E. A. Reed so long pas- tor of the Second Congregational Church, and Dr. William C. Hammond. Mr. Judd, a firm believer in the Christian verities, took an active part in the life of the three Congregationalist Churches in Holyoke, being at various times, teacher and superintendent of Sunday School. For many years prior to his death he had been a deacon in the First Congregational Church. That Mr. Judd had high ideals as a teacher can be seen in the fact that when he was addressing the large number of Morgan Alumni who came to do him honor at the time of his retirement, he likened his Work to that of a soldier fighting against ig- norance, malice and greed, and striving to inculcate in growing boys and girls an ardent desire to uphold love of honor and principles of high citizenship. Various tributes to Mr. Judd have been paid. It has been said that he was master of his subject as Well as of his class. Whether his subject was Latin or History, he never had a text book in his hand in class. Of him one of his pupils wrote: To hear him with his great gift of graphic delineation of character drives home through the me- dium of his beloved historical men and Women the lesson of right and Wrong was an inspiration. Of him, Dr. Conant said: Mr, Judd was a school-master by instinct rather than by design. His superior qualities of intellect alone entitle him to a high place in the pro- fession he loved and honored. I would, however, base Mr. Judd's claim to an exalted place in Holyoke's Hall of Fame on his personal interest in each boy and girl in his school. His understanding interest and acquaintance extended far beyond the school Walls. 'Thousands rise and call kim blessed? 'Tloe works be did will live after him., In the death of Mr. Judd, Holyoke has lost a Christian gentleman.

Page 27 text:

Morgan to attend the Friday assemblies. At Holyoke High School he substituted fre- quently in Latin or in History, and gave each year lectures to the United States history classes. His last lecture-the eighth of a series of thirteen-on the Formation and Adoption of the Constitution was given just a week before his death that oc- curred March 5, 1929. Mr. Judd is a descendant of the early settlers who drove their flocks and herds be- fore them into the Connecticut Valley and settled in New Englandf' He was not born in New England, however, but in Michigan, the son of Samuel A. Judd, a cap- tain of one of the first regiments to be organized in that state at the beginning of the Civil War. One of Mr. Judd,s childhood recollections is of being with his mother Qformerly Clara L. Smith of South Hadleyj and with his little sister Cknown later in Holyoke as Mrs. Charles P. Lymanj in camp in Virginia where officers were al- lowed to take their families for a short time. Mr. Judd's first lessons in history were learned from war bulletin boards and were recited to anxious relatives and neigh- bors. His first great grief was the news of the death of his father who was killed in the famous battle of Fair Oaks. Mr. Judd remained in Michigan after his father,s death and was educated in the Grand Rapids public schools, but spent his summers in South Hadley. When he was thirteen he came East, prepared for college at Monson Academy and under private tutors, and entered Amherst with the standing of a second year student. At Amherst he was a member of the varsity baseball team of which Frederick H. Gillette, who be- came United States Senator, and Speaker of the House, was captain. Mr. Judd,s love of baseball and indeed of all other sports, remained with him throughout his long life. For many years he played baseball with his pupils, inspiring them to play good clean games, and even after his retirement followed all their sports with the greatest zest. In 1878 Mr. Judd married Frances I. Brown, one of the pupils in the Junior class when he first came to teach in Holyoke High, and for two years after her gradua- tion, a teacher in Holyoke grades. They had two children: Mabel L. and Samuel E. Miss Judd had taught in Holyoke High School, since the year following her gradua- tion from Mount Holyoke College in 1901, but retires at the close of this school year to enter the Foreign Mission Sisters of St. Dominic. Mr. S. E. Judd, Yale 1901, taught for several years in New York City high schools, and then for twenty-one years was with Life Savers, Incorporated, Port Chester, New York, retiring from its Executive Vice Presidency last July. He married Rosalthea Haigh, and they have one daughter, Althea, a graduate of Randolph Macon College, Lynchburg, Virginia. During Mr. Judd's long life in Holyoke, he made an enviable place for himself in his community. He interested himself in every phase of its life, whether political, so-



Page 29 text:

CHARLES HENRY KEYES was born in Bridgeport, Wisconsin on September 6, 1858. His father, Henry Keyes, a railroad master mechanic and engineer, was the youngest son of a Vermont farmer who felt the call of the new west and moved to what was then frontier country in Western New York State. As a young man, Henry Keyes moved west again to help in the construction of railroads in Wisconsin. Charles Henry Keyes grew up in the town of Prairie du Chien, attended the country schools, the local academy, and St. John's College, conducted by the Christian Brothers, a teaching order of the Roman Catholic Church, being graduated A.B. in 1879. He taught country schools in Pepin and River Falls, Wfisconsin, and in the River Falls Normal School. In 1886 he was elected superintendent of schools in Jamesville, Wisconsin. While in Jamesville in 1888, Mr. Keyes was admitted to the bar and to practice in the supreme court in 1889. After a year in the practice of law, he accepted the superintend- ency of schools in Riverside, California. The presidency of Throop Polytechnic Institute at Pasadena was offered him in 1892. This office he filled most ably until 1906. From 1896 to 1897, Mr. Keyes did graduate work at the University of California, declining the superintendency of schools in Los Angeles and San Francisco. Coming east to attend the National Education Association convention in Buffalo in the sum- mer of 1897, he was tendered the principalship of the Holyoke High School by Mr. Preston B. Search, superintendent of the Holyoke schools, who had been super- intendent of the Los Angeles Public Schools. Plans for a new high school building had already been accepted when Mr. Keyes came to Holyoke. Supervision of its construction and equipment, a task for which he was peculiarly fitted, was one of his interesting duties during his first year in New England. After two years, described by an associate as exceedingly profitable for both scholar and teacher, Mr. Keyes went to the superintendency at Hartford, Connecticut where he remained until 1910. From 1910 to 1912, he did graduate work at Co- lumbia University, receiving his Doctor of Philosophy degree in June 1912. In August 1912, he took up his duties as President of Skidmore College in Saratoga, New York, a position he held until his death on January 16, 1925.

Suggestions in the Holyoke High School - Annual Yearbook (Holyoke, MA) collection:

Holyoke High School - Annual Yearbook (Holyoke, MA) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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Holyoke High School - Annual Yearbook (Holyoke, MA) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

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Holyoke High School - Annual Yearbook (Holyoke, MA) online collection, 1938 Edition, Page 1

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Holyoke High School - Annual Yearbook (Holyoke, MA) online collection, 1941 Edition, Page 1

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Holyoke High School - Annual Yearbook (Holyoke, MA) online collection, 1946 Edition, Page 1

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Holyoke High School - Annual Yearbook (Holyoke, MA) online collection, 1947 Edition, Page 1

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