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Page 15 text:
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All objections clear, the bill quickly passed and the tk . phno ph. 4ot«d OcHh»» J. 190S, »h«w» lK« ignmlm wnww lor tKo lint orodrrr.ii . . ■ . . , .1 bvd r% orr rKo Ooklond (ompvr, Tho SrKool ol Mioo . A crowd ol noortir rSroo rKovtood omorrod or rKo legislators went on to more pressing work, the revision ot the MKido io. .h. imr«n ««»•«. on.nd»d by Oor» » w foirt»nk», »«. p.«ku«i i« Tod «oo» i Articles of Confederation. Their efforts were culminated the same morning that the new school opened. On September 17, 1787 the convention delegates signed the new Constitution of the United States of America. Six male students abandoned the excitement of the frontier town to attend sessions in what has become the oldest institution of learning, excepting the University of Nashville, west of the Appalachians. Sam Semple's Tavern along the Monongahela was filled with the towns leading citizens, who had stopped to talk and pick up any mail that incoming travelers may have brought them. (There was no postal service then). You could make payments in cash, country produce, or ginseng (a type of herb) at John Ormsby's General Store. He carried men's and women's cotton or worsted hose, corduroys, velvets, gloves, superfine broadcloth, snuffboxes, and an assortment of saddle ware and bar iron. His terms led a stranger to exclaim that Pittsburgh was infested by a combination of pensioned scoundrek who made a business of cheating and overcharging strangers. Only history knows who those six boys were who paid the annual tuition of $13.60 as they entered the log schoolhouse, checking their guns at the door and pushing 11
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Page 14 text:
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Three thousand acres of land were then on sale along the northern shore of the Allegheny River, across from the location of the Fort. Despite his promise to his people not to be forgetful of obtaining what he could of the land, the deal fell through for lack of funds. Not despairing, Brackenridge quickly turned to the Penn family and accepted as a gift for the proposed Academy, four lots making up a square block bounded by Smithfield, Cherry, Second and Third Streets. The acreage was known as Ewalt's Field. (The site today is occupied by Kaufmann's parking garage, down town, and is marked by a plaque mounted on the side of the building. All of the original structures were destroyed by the Great Fire of 1845). The final obstacle to be mounted before the bill could pass the assembly was procurement of an endowment. The clever statesman persuaded the legislature into a grant of five thousand acres of unappropriated wilderness land in Lawrence and Butler counties. Few realized that Brackenridge would sell them for nineteen thousand dollars, to be used as the endowment. The session was also busy with other matters, including the selection of delegates to the Continental Congress, which was to debate revisions to the Articles of Confederation, and possibly draff a new constitution for the country. Pennsylvania governor Ben Franklin was in attendance at that session. r A v»ow 4 I ho Srhonloy Formi oioo foood 1900. Tho lorogrovnd of lK« photograph I howl tho tiro now e«upiod by tho Cothodiol ol looming, fifth Aronvo rvnt along I ho Wf. bonlod by o row of houtot. Tho HoopJo of St. Fovft Cothodrol on bo toon .n tho botkgroond, contor. Wobtto Moll Motol. Motion Inttftuto, Hoim Chopol. ond tho fttttburgh Athlohc Attoootion building woro obtont from tho 1900 londxopo, 10
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Page 16 text:
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A vi«w of fh Schonloy Footm 0100 o tvnd 1904. TKo photograph wet token from the Wobtlot Moll area fifth Aronvo con bo toon going off lo the right, with SeHefiefd Arenve on the loft, forbet hold con bo toon ot the top loft, with tho Schonloy Hotol ot the top right The confer of the photograph it now occupied by rho Cofhodrol of looming. knives into their boots as they took their seats on the split log benches. The Great Fire of 1845 destroyed all records. The term ran from the end of harvest to the beginning of planting season. The schoolhouse was constructed of logs stuffed with mud, the cabin having only one room with a fireplace and a little alcove where boys could hang their guns. The school desks were boards fastened to the wall along the windows, boards which were dropped down at night when the schoolroom doubled as a schoolmaster's meeting room and as his bedroom. The seats were backless split-log benches with the split side up. After classes, the new students faced a four mile trip back across town, which meant more than an hour's hike through some of the roughest Indian country known. They normally headed for the safety of the fort, and then down Liberty Street, a dirt road lined with small taverns and wooden hut stores peddling blankets, match coats, hats, looking glasses, knives, beads and bracelets of glass, all manner of rough-hewn toys for children, guns, flints, powder and lead, and kegs of rum used to barter with the Indians. Water Street was filled with wagons loaded with vegetables on the way to the 2
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