Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH)

 - Class of 1905

Page 14 of 130

 

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 14 of 130
Page 14 of 130



Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1905 Edition, Page 13
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Page 14 text:

been transferred to Walnut Hills. Miss Henrietta Reusehel has been transferred to the Woodward colony. Since lEiHl the department of drawing has been under the able direction of Miss Jeanette Fist. In 190?, Mr. Paul Francis XYalkcr was appointed instructor of Spanish; Mr. M. Crane, and Miss Agnes Brown were added to the teaching corps in February, 15'023. Miss Enlalie Artois resigned and Miss Estelle Bode was appointed to take her place in September, lEiUIi. Before the September term of this year Opened Mr. J. Rcmsen Bishop resigned as prin- cipal of lValnut Hills to become the principal of a Detroit High School. Mr. William Taylor Harris, n'hu was the principal ut' the XVi'amln-unl Colony, was appointed to take his. place, Mr. Nel- 51m .L X'l'alkcr was- also added In the faculty. x IX. The steadily increasing attendance of the school has necessitated the establishment of a colony department, which has its present quarters in the Twenty-second District School Building, on XYalnut Hills. colony acconmioclate one hundred and sixty first- year pupils. whose classvwork is supervised by four instructors. Miss Xurzi Ettlinger. Miss Agnes Brown. Mia: King and Miss Johnson. The inn rooms occupied by the The entire high-school faculty, including special teachers, now numbers eleven men and Sixteen n'mncn. 'thm is it that said: discipline must result in a selfegoverning being ?' 'l 'Rcmembcr that 30111- It is the aim of the school meter to forget this injunction of perhaps the greatest thinker in the O l domain of education. Dependence upon the will Of others to force us to decision or action is VlClOLlS in its essence. The high school of to-day ought to be well enough established to put aside Shams of all kintls-to call to itself the hearty support of parents and school authorities. It should be strong enough to pursue its progress towaw the only good worth reaching, self-gov- ernment and selfeactivity, although one in ten of its pupils should thereby be declared, temporarily or pcrnmnenthg poor material for citizenship. This school stands for the freedom of the teacher and for absolute fidelity as the justification of that freedom. Conscience. and not force, will be here the ultimate appeal, :15 soon as circumstances will permit so radical a change from local tradi- In the meantime, progress is to be made in this direction as rapidly as possible. l' The need of having the feelings on the side of action has long been rucugnized as imperative,' says one of our well-known school men. This school aims tn recognize this imperative need, with no Shirk- tion. ing of temporary inconveniences caused by this recognition. Lufty aim, thoroughness of daily mark, hunur and truth in all things, are the watchwords nr our progress. We shall thus win to our support all who have good ethical impulses and give full exercise to these qualities. Many who are ethically weak we shall, through exercise, strengthen. No one will leave this school without an increased respect for right doing and high thinking. We shall teach love of learning, as well as learning. and shall hope to see the future of our work. not in school records, but in noble lives.

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have, from time to time, been made in the com; position of the committee, by the retirement of some members and the appointment of others, so that the body at present consists of John Schwaab, Chairman; Jacob Schroeder, William J. Klein, L. J. Dauner, and Dr. Robert W. Stewart. The Walnut Hills High School was opened in September, 1895, with a corps of twenty teach- ers and an attendance of 684 pupils. On Friday, October 11, the building was formally dedicated. The Superintendent and the several school officers upon whom devolved the delicate and complicated function of overseeing the affairs of the great school their energy had created were equal to the responsibility. The organization and equipment of the school were completed with more rapidity than was expected, 5'0 that, within a very few weeks from the start, everything was in running order, and a zealous esprit du corps already manifested itself among the pupils, Necessarily the success of the school must de- pend upon the Vigilance and hdelity 0f the teaching body. Six of the teachers were transferred from the older high schools: two from Hughes, Mr. Bishop and Mr. Venable; four from Woodward, Mr. A. S. Henshaw, Miss Rachel V. Wheeler, Mrs. C. D. Klemm, and Miss Eulalie Artois. Other experienced instructors were selected from varii ous schools in which they had won reputation, or were chosen on account of high attainments in college. Mr. H. E. Newman, teacher of chemis try and physics, had been instructor in the Uni- versity. Mr. Julius Fuchs was placed in Charge 11 0f the German teaching. Mr. Arthur Knoch was called to direct the athletic training of the pupils and to have charge of the gymnasium. Without specifying the grades to which they were as- signed, 01- the particular branches by them taught, we here record the rest of the names of those who formed the teaching corps in the first two years of the history of the school. These are: Miss Mary E. Magurk, Miss Henrietta Reuschel, Miss Helen Shrader, Miss Belle Woods, Miss Margaret E. Layman, Miss Agatha Hope Rice, Miss Jane S. OtHara, Miss Eleanor Passel, Miss Esther H. Hagen, Miss Mamie E. Walker, and Miss Alma Diserens. The Special department of drawing was conducted by Miss Frances Kohnky, and the musical directorship 0f the school was intrusted to Mr. Joseph Surdo, Since the organization of the faculty, in 1895, several changes have been made: Miss Hagen and Miss Walker both resigned in 1H97, and in January of the same year Miss Laura E. Aldrich was appointel teacher of elocution in the new school. In the following year, 1898, Miss Alice L. Bette, Miss Louise Spilman, and Miss Alma. S. Fick were added to the teaching force, and in 1899 Mme. Eleanor Peltier was appointed teacher of French. She resigned in 1900, and M. Nonnez was called to fill her place. Miss Diser- ens withdrew in 1899, and Miss Frances Kohnky was transferred to Hughes. Dr. W. H. Venable resigned in 1900, and his son, Emerson Venable, was appointed to succeed him as teacher of litera- ture, Miss Magurk has gone to Woodward School and Miss Rice to Hughes, from which MiSS Frances Kohnky and Miss Nora Ettlinger have



Page 15 text:

In conclusion, a brief account of the material equipment of the Walnut Hills High School. Though a line building does not make an excel- lent school, it goes far to facilitate the work of the educator. The light, airy, cheery recitation rooms of this school, most of which are decorated with artistic and appropriate pictures, are them- selves silent teachers. The gymnasium is one of the completest in the West. The laboratory, for practical work in chemistry antl physics, is fitted up in accordance with modern requirementsv The library, though not yet large, is growing steadily. and it contains a very choice selection of standard books, in history, elementary science, literature, and especially in the Greek and Roman classics, There is also 011 its shelves a valuable series of works in German and in French. Add to all these a carefully selected assortment of cyclope- dias, dictionaries, and other necessary reference hooks. Prohuhiy this library is the best of its size, and for its purpose, of any in the city. The school is supplied with a complete set of excellent maps. A good lantern, with numerous $3 ! ugly L235: 13 stereopticon slides illustrating various branches Of study, has been made useful by some of the teachers. The school paper, a monthly publication called THE GLHML has been conducted with zeal and vigor since the beginning of the year 1mm. There has heen an organized body of cadets maintained by the 13035 ever since the school was founded. The Athletic Association. an organiza- tion to further the practice 01' football and other sports, has taken a sufficiently prominent part in competitive affairs to give the school a high repu- tation for systematic bodily training. The debating society is of vast benefit to its members and is a credit to the school. This association was the first in Cincinnati to challenge and encounter in public discussion :1 rival body of its kind from another city. The motto of the Walnut Hills High School Szirszmz ad Smmnum. should inspire its little army of students to the most persevering efforts for worlhier 'nds. C V H. VENABLE. fun!!! My; $1M Q$L y x

Suggestions in the Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) collection:

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1902 Edition, Page 1

1902

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1903 Edition, Page 1

1903

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1904 Edition, Page 1

1904

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1906 Edition, Page 1

1906

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1907 Edition, Page 1

1907

Walnut Hills High School - Remembrancer Yearbook (Cincinnati, OH) online collection, 1908 Edition, Page 1

1908


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