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Page 12 text:
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THE CHICAGO NORMAL COLLEGE The Chicago Normal College today, with its fine faculty and many studentf5, is vastly different from the first school of teacher training. It was in 1856 that a department for training teachers was established by the city for the first time. It was merely an additional course in the Central High School. The following year Edward C. Delano w as put at its head and he continued to direct the Normal School work in Chicago for twenty years. In 1865 a practice school which had long been recommended was established at the Scammou School under the direction of ]Mrs. Ella Flagg Young. Pupils were permitted to enter the Normal School upon examination directly from the grammar schools. After 1872 all candidates were required to pass an examination, not only in the common branches, but also in the studies pursued in the first year of the high schools, this being the highest requirement, so far as known, of any state or county normal in the country at that time. tile school was eloseil. This excess was brought about by the elimination of entrance examinations. A training class for cadets was organized in 1893 in the North Division of the city. Three years later the Cook County Normal School, estab- lished in 1863, and the city cadet system were consolidated in the building of the County School, with the name of the Chicago Normal School and under the control of the city Board of Education. The Board had voted to accept the Cook County Normal School property and to maintain the Nor- mal School for the benefit of Chicago and Cook County with no cliange in its management. Colo- nel Parker was continued as the principal, serving in that capacity until his resignation in 1899. Dr. Arnold Tompkins succeeded him as the head of the school, which position he held until his death in 1905. Mrs. Ella Flagg Young then became prin- cipal, but in 1909 she became superintendent of schools and the post was again vacant. In 1871 the school became a separate institu- In 1905 the Chicago Normal College moved into tion, ])ut in 1876, because of an excess of teachers, a new building on the site of the old school. All
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Page 13 text:
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that remains of the old County Building is the weather-worn corner stone, inscribed with the date 1869 and the names of some of those instru- mental in the erection of the building. Dr. William Bishop Owen was appointed prin- cipal of the college in 1909, and it was uuder his competent direction that the school did much of its expanding. The three practice schools. Parker, Haines and Carter, whicli had been in vogue since 1902, were discontinued in 1920. They were succeeded by fifty co-operating scliools, spread well over the citA-, to which .students were assigned for a ten-week practice period. The Arts and Gymnasium building, with its wonderful shops, its gymnasium and its swimming pool, was opened in 1915. It was at this time that the physical health of the College became a genu- ine factor. Late in 1924 there was a general revision of the camjius in line with establishing tenuis courts and athetic fields for the schools lodged in the buildings of the college. A greenhouse containing three classrooms and several specimen rooms was begun and completed in the spring of 1925. Thus the science department was given a much wider scope. Today the Chicago Xornud College includes five luiildings and a large, beautiful campus with sev- eral athletic fields. It has 1.800 studeuts made up of the Elementary. University-Teachers, Kinder- garten. Household Arts and ilauual Training groups. Is it any wonder that it is difficult to visixalize this institution of today when one con- siders its meager beginning as a mere department in a high school?
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