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Page 11 text:
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ST FF I955 I9 6 HI ADXI XQTI R mx N urltt I I1 f If 'I RI ASI RI R rlt C L IIINLI' I4 w Im Sthou ll PIIH NIC IAXIS 1 mr 'NI 4 N CoIumIw 1 NIU t1I Sthn 147 Idxx ltd XX CJxn1rI NI ID H zrx 1rtI NIuI1t1I Sthool 1916 C Iurlu IDIXIOII M D Tam wlc I mxcrmtx 1947 B RSAR S CDI I ICI In Qt rIC B11 Htltn XX Mml-Cltr HL Ll oIms4m NL RSI Q I lLII'1 R XVI11ttI1orm R N Loss U I,lI'IxS RN SI C RI IARII S Cxcrtrudt Cobq Cormm Ix1I mm Ruth M Lyons Ilctmor Mltthcll Rose Muon CHEI Gaston Bourgjeolb SUPI RINTI NDI N'I CDI Bl II DINCIS A Nillton T1Ibot IIOI QI MOTHI R VIFKLEIIIIJ Drchcr IIBRARIAN Vern Pzlmcr ND CROUND9 7 I I , I Artl ' II. SI ' IYA., YLIIC I IVSFSIUI IQI5 MW., Yale I'nivcrsity', IIS I ruI I I4 '. IIcswI111uyt'1', PILI5., Y.1I ' I' - sity. QICQ I.I..I5.. Y.1Ic ,. ' f ,I. Q20 XY' II -I, . tum-.II.D., f i. . 'II1 f' ml. 7-1 If Q ff .2 Lu 4 . A ', fwfr 'I 'I i A ' ' 'L I .
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Page 10 text:
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Page 12 text:
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,ti A , ,, . ,.,- Y Recently two well known alumni of Cheshire haxe published autobiographies which tell of their days at the Academy Some of the trials and problems which they faced were those which almost any boy would find in a boarding school But other problems show us an Academy so different from the present that wc become excn more conscious than before of the great changes which haxc tilcen place in a history of one hundred sixty two years If we count in four seasons there are 618 seasons As early as lebruary 1792 the Episcopal Comention of Connecticut began to make inquiry what can be done toward erecting an Episcopal Academy In 1794 Cheshire was chosen as the seat Ex en before and building could be erected the Rex Mr Bronson opened a school in accordance with the wishes of the Conyention The cornerstone of what is now Bowden Hall was laid April 28 1796 a constitution was adopted and Dr ohn Bowden was chosen principal The Thirty Proprietors conxeyed to the Trustees the building at a cost of 702 pounds lawful money These proprietors who raised the money must haxe been xery adxanced people One account says they were deeply impressed with the importance of establishing literary in stitutions Only thirteen were Episcopalians and the constitution forbade compulsory religious serxices except as the parents and guardians should direct Provision exen in that early moment in the life of our country fthe federal Constitution was then only fue years oldj was made for female education Few of the Cheshire men who raised the crucial 702 pounds were men of wealth The wife of one is reported to haxe thought that instead of her husband s giying money to the Academy he should haxe bought her glass for the windows of their home since they had only oiled paper and she was unable to see her neighbors Most proprietors were farmers on farms fairly distant from the pro posed site around which there were only a few houses, There were also the Congrega- tional Church-predecessor of the present exquisite one on the green-and St. Peter's Episcopal Church with whose history the Academy's has been so intertwined that the yery transepts of the present edifice were built to accommodate our students and which still has close friendly relations though the Academy has long been non-sectarian. 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