E. Henry P. Eames (1872-1950) Pianist and lecturer. b. Sept. 12, 1872 in Chicago, Ill. Studied in U.S. and abroad under private teachers including.
- Links to online books and articles relating to the American Revolution 1775-1783 generally and to the Southern Campaign specifically.
- The History of South Australia Volume II by Edwin Hodder.
American Educational History Timeline. American. Educational History: A Hypertext Timeline. Last updated September 1. See the. lesson plan designed for use with this timeline. August 1. 4. 2. 01. However, it. is virtually impossible to keep them all current.
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If you find a broken link, please let me know. You can reach me at. The first. permanent English settlement in North America is established by. Virginia Company at. Jamestown in what is now.
Virginia. 1. 62. 0 - The. Cape Cod, bringing the "Pilgrims" who. Plymouth Colony. Many of the Pilgrims are. England. Their religious views. New England colonies.
The first Latin Grammar School. Boston Latin. School) is established.
Latin Grammar. Schools are designed for sons of certain social classes who are. The first "free school" in Virginia opens. However. education in the Southern. Harvard College. the first higher education institution in what is now the United States, is established. Newtowne (now Cambridge), Massachusetts.
The first printing. American Colonies is set up at Harvard College. Henry Dunster becomes President of Harvard College. The. Massachusetts Bay School Law is passed. It requires that parents. The Massachusetts Law of 1.
Old Deluder Satan. Act, is passed. It decrees that every town of at least 5. Latin grammar. school master who will prepare students to attend Harvard College.
Essay Concerning Human Understanding,which. Locke's. views concerning the mind and learning greatly influence American. The first. New England. Primer is printed in Boston.
It becomes the most widely- used. New England. 1. 69. The Plymouth Colony merges with the Massachusetts Bay.
Colony. About 5. 0 miles to the north, in Salem, the infamous. Salem Witch Trials take place. John Locke's. Some Thoughts Concerning Education is published, describing his. His ideas regarding educating the. On Working Schools, published in 1. The. College of William and Mary is established in Virginia. It is the. second college to open in colonial America and has the distinction of.
Thomas Jefferson's college. The. first publicly supported library in the U.
S. is established in Charles Town. South Carolina. Two years later, the General Assembly of South Carolina passes. Christopher Dock, a Mennonite and one of Pennsylvania's most famous. Germany and later opens a school in Montgomery. County, PA. Dock's book, Schul- Ordnung (meaning school.
America. Typical of those in the. Pennsylvania are established not only by the Mennonites, but. Quakers and other religious groups as well. The. Ursuline Academy of New Orleans is founded. A Catholic. school for girls sponsored by Sisters of the Order of Saint.
Ursula, it is "the oldest continuously operating school for. Catholic school in the United States."1. Christian. Wolff describes the human mind as consisting of powers or. Called Faculty Psychology,this doctrine holds that the. This viewpoint greatly influences American education throughout the. Century and beyond. Franklin forms the American Philosophical Society, which helps.
European Enlightenment, including those of John Locke, to colonial. America. Emphasizing secularism, science, and human reason, these ideas. Franklin and. Jefferson. Benjamin Franklin helps to establish the first. English Academy" in Philadelphia with a curriculum that is both. The. academy ultimately becomes the. University of. Pennsylvania.
St. Matthew Lutheran School. Lutheran "parish. North America, is founded in New York City by.
Melchior Muhlenberg, after whom. Muhlenberg College in Allentown. Pennsylvania is named. The. French and Indian War begins in colonial America as the French and. Indian allies fight the English for territorial control.
Swiss- born. Jean- Jacques Rousseau's book. Rousseau's ideas on. Century. American philosopher and educational reformer. John Dewey. 1. 76. The French are defeated, and the.
French and Indian. War ends with the. Treaty of Paris. It gives most French territory in North America to.
England. 1. 76. 6 - The. Moravians, a. protestant denomination from central Europe, establish the village of. Salem in North Carolina. Six years later (1. Salem College, a liberal arts college for women with a current enrollment of. The. Revolutionary War begins.
Declaration of Independence is adopted by the Continental Congress on July. Written by Thomas. Jefferson, The document serves notice to. King George III. and the rest of the world that the American Colonies no longer considered. British Empire. 1. Jefferson proposes a two- track educational system, with different. The. Revolutionary War.
Treaty of Paris,which recognizes U. S. independence and possession of all land east of the Mississippi except.
Spanish colony of Florida. Because of his dissatisfaction with English.
Noah Webster writes. A Grammatical Institute of the English Language , consisting of. They. become very widely used throughout the United States. In fact, the. spelling volume, later renamed the. American Spelling Bookand.
Blue- Backed Speller, has never. The. of 1. 78. 4 divides the Western territories (north of the Ohio River. Mississippi) into ten separate territories that would.
The. University of Georgia becomes. America's first. state- chartered university."1. The. Ordinance of 1. The Constitutional Convention assembles in Philadelphia. Later that. year, the constitution is endorsed by the Confederation Congress (the.
U. S. Constitution) and sent to state legislatures for ratification. The. document does not include the words education or school. The. Northwest Ordinance is enacted by the Confederation Congress. It. provides a plan for western expansion and bans slavery in new states. Specifically recognizing the importance of education, Act 3 of the. Religion, morality, and knowledge, being necessary to.
Perhaps of more of practical. The Young Ladies.
Academy opens in Philadelphia and becomes the first academy for girls in the. The U. S. Constitution. On December 1. 1. The University. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill is.
N. C. General Assembly.". It is "the only public university to award. Century."1. 79. 1 - . The Bill of. Rights is passed by the first Congress of the new United. States. No mention is made of education in any of the amendments. However, the Tenth Amendment to the Constitution states that powers not.
States. respectively, or to the people." Thus, education becomes a function of. James. Pillans invents the. The. War of 1. 81. Second War of Independence," occurs for multiple. U. S. desires for territorial expansion and British. U. S. merchant ships. The war begins with an.
Canada by U. S. forces. Though the. Treaty of Ghent, signed.
December 2. 4, 1. January 8, 1. 81. U. S. forces. defeating the British at New Orleans. The. Connecticut Asylum at Hartford for the Instruction of Deaf and Dumb. Persons opens. It is the first permanent school for the deaf in the. Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet and Laurent Clerc are the school's.
In 1. 86. 4, Thomas Gallaudet's son, Edward Miner Gallaudet. Gallaudet. University, the first college specifically for deaf students. The first public high school. English High School, opens . Catherine Beecher founds the. Hartford Female. Seminary, a private school for girls in Hartford, Connecticut. She goes on. to found more schools and become a.
Her sister. Beecher Stowe, an influential abolitionist, is the author of. Uncle Tom's Cabin. The state of. Massachusetts passes a law requiring towns of more than 5. The. New England. Asylum for the Blind, now the Perkins School for the Blind, opens. Massachusetts, becoming the first school in the U. S. for children. with visual disabilities.
The first of. William Holmes Mc. Guffey's readers is published.
Their secular tone. Puritan texts of the day.
The. Mc. Guffey Readers. Century. 1. 83. 7 - . Horace Mann becomes Secretary of the newly formed Massachusetts. State Board of Education. A visionary educator and proponent of public. Mann works tirelessly for increased funding of. As Editor of the.
Common School Journal, his belief in the importance of free. He resigns his. position as Secretary in 1. Congressional seat vacated by. John Quincy Adams and later becomes the first president of. College. 1. 83. 7 - Louisville, Kentucky appoints the. Eighty students arrive at. Holyoke Female Seminary, the first college for women in the U.
S. Its founder/president is. Mary Lyon. 1. 83. The. African Institute (later called the Institute for Colored Youth) opens in. Cheyney, Pennsylvania. Now called Cheyney University, it the oldest institution of higher learning for African. Americans. 1. 83.
The first state funded school. Lexington, Massachusetts.
The History of South Australia Volume II. Title: The History of South Australia Volume II. Author: Edwin Hodder. A Project Gutenberg of Australia e. Book *. e. Book No.: 1. Language: English. Date first posted: July 2.
Date most recently July 2. Produced by: Ned Overton. Project Gutenberg Australia e. Books are created from printed editions. Australia, unless a copyright notice.
We do NOT keep any e. Books in compliance with a particular. Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the. This e. Book is made available at no cost and with almost no restrictions.
You may copy it, give it away or re- use it under the terms. Project Gutenberg Australia Licence which may be viewed online. GO TO Project Gutenberg. Australia HOME PAGEProduction Notes: Some aspects of the punctuation have been modernised; a small. The text. font size of the Appendices has not been reduced.
The single map. accompanying this volume has been included. The other map. mentioned on the title page accompanies Volume I.)The various administrations have been added to the Chrological. Summary chapter in the Table of Contents.
THE HISTORYOFSOUTH AUSTRALIA. FROM ITS FOUNDATION TO THEYEAR OF ITS JUBILEE.
WITH ACHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARYOF ALL THE PRINCIPAL EVENTS OF INTERESTUP TO DATE. BYAUTHOR OF"MEMORIES OF NEW ZEALAND LIFE," "CITIES OF THE WORLD,""GEORGE FIFE ANGAS, FATHER AND FOUNDER OF SOUTH AUSTRALIA,".
ETC. WITH TWO MAPS. VOL. II. LONDON: SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON & COMPANYLIMITED,St. Dunstan's House,FETTER LANE, FLEET STREET, E.
C. 1. 89. 3.(All rights. CONTENTS OF VOL. I. CHAPTER XII. INTERIM ADMINISTRATION OF LIEUTENANT- COLONEL. HAMLEY. February 2. February 1. 6th. 1.
Dissolution.—Reform and. Protection.—Troublous Times.—The Northern. Territory.—Public. Finances.—Crisis- mongering.—The "St.
George of the. Land Reformers."—The "Battle of the. Areas."—Review. CHAPTER XIII. ADMINISTRATION OF SIR JAMES FERGUSSON, BART.
February 1. 6th, 1. December. 1. 87. 2. Brilliant Career.—Second Visit. H. R. H. the Duke of Edinburgh.—Arrival of New.
Governor.—Palmerston, the New Settlement in Northern. Territory.—Mr. G. W. Goyder and his Survey. Party.—Appeal to the Privy Council.—Parliamentary. Procedure in Adelaide.—Elections.—A Land. Bill.—Dissolution.—Education and Bible.
Reading.—A Question of. Precedence.—Finances.—Public Debt of the. Colony.—The Transcontinental Telegraph.—Mr. C. Todd.—A Gigantic Undertaking.—Horse.
Expresses.—Completion of Telegraph from Port Darwin to Port. Augusta.—Bonuses and. Banquets.—Honours.—Speeches. Disintegration of the. Empire."—Gold Mining in Northern.
Territory.—Explorations.—Mr. John. Forrest.—Colonel. Warburton.—Gosse.—Giles.—Higher. Education.—Prince Alfred Sailors' Home.—Bushmen's. Club.—New Industries.—Progress in.
Buildings.—Valedictory Address of Governor. CHAPTER XIV. ADMINISTRATION OF SIR ANTHONY MUSGRAVE.
June, 1. 87. 3—January, 1. Sir Richard Hanson, Acting. Governor.—Antecedents of Mr. A. Musgrave.—Policy with. Northern Territory.—Gold Companies.—Visit. Mr. Reynolds to Palmerston.—Coolie Labour.—Mr. G. B. Scott, Government Resident.—Port Darwin declared a.
Free Port.—Action of the North Australian Land. Company.—Free and Assisted Immigration.—Condition of. Working Classes.—Free, Secular, and Compulsory. Education.—Parliamentary "Standing Dishes."—Project. Transcontinental Railway.—New Roads.—The Murray. Railway Scheme.—New Industries.—Silk. Culture.—Explorations of Mr.
Gosse.—Colonel. Warburton.—Mr. Ernest Giles.—Mr. John. Forrest.—Bridging the Murray.—Wreck of the. Gothenburg.—Opening of Adelaide University.—Union. College.—Magnificent Gifts.—Governor's Farewell. Address. CHAPTER XV. ADMINISTRATION OF GENERAL SIR WILLIAM F.
D. JERVOIS. G. C. M. G. October, 1.
January, 1. 88. 3. Mr. Justice Way, Acting.
Governor.—Arrival of Sir W. W. Cairns.—A Short. Administration.—Mr. Justice Way again Acting.
Governor.—Arrival of Sir William Jervois.—Colonial. Defence.—A Parliamentary Deadlock.—A Land and. Property Tax Bill.—Financial Affairs—Sunday Opening. Institutes.—Intercolonial Conference.—Sir George. Kingston.—Reform of the Upper House.—The Crown Lands. Department. Law Reforms.—The Northern Territory and Chinese. Immigration.—The Sugar Cultivation Act.—Indian Coolie.
Immigrants.—Explorations.—Mr. Favenc.—The. Census.—Visit of Prince Albert Victor and Prince George of. Wales.—A Day at Collingrove, Angaston.—The Adelaide. Exhibition.—The Torrens Lake.—Drought and. Agricultural Distress.—Charter of Adelaide. University.—Governor's Farewell Speech.—South. Australian Loans.
CHAPTER XVI. ADMINISTRATION OF SIR WILLIAM C. F. ROBINSON. K. C. M. G. February 1. March 5. 1. 88. 9. Antecedents of Sir William. Robinson.—Formation of Old Colonists'. Association.—The Bray Ministry.
Colonial. Federation.—New Electoral Act.—A Scheme of. Taxation.—The Pastoral Land Act—The March of. Progress.—Explorations.—Mr. A. N. Chambers.—Mr. Charles Winnecke.—Mr.
W. Whitfield Mills.—Defence of. Colony.—Movements in the Northern Territory.—The. Jubilee of the Colony.—State of the Times.—Colonial. Indian Exhibition in London.—Celebrating the Fiftieth. Anniversary of Foundation Day.—Adelaide Jubilee. Exhibition.—A Silver Mining Boom.—Chinese. Immigration.—Harvests.—Departure of Sir William.
Robinson.—Arrival of the Earl of Kintore.—Adelaide in. Railways.—The Playford Government.—Local. Option.—Staple Trades and. Industries.—Wheat—Wool.—Mining.—Wines.—Water. Conservation and Irrigation.—Forest Culture.—Fruit. Growing.—Other Industries.—Conclusion.
Chronological Summary of Events from the Foundation of the. Colony[Administrations: Captain Hindmarsh.
R. N. Interim, Mr. G. M. Stephens. Colonel Gawler. Captain Grey. Major Robe. Sir Henry Young. Interim, Mr. B. T. Finniss. Sir R.
G. Macdonnell. Sir Dominick. Daly. Interim, Lieut.- Colonel. Hamley. Sir James Fergusson. Bart. Interim, Sir Richard. Hanson. Sir Anthony Musgrave. K. C. M. Q. Interim, Chief Justice Way.
I)Sir W. W. Cairns. K. C. M. G. Interim, Chief Justice Way. II)Sir Willlam Jervois. G. C. M. G. Interim, Chief Justice Way. III)Sir William. Robinson.
Interim, Chief Justice Way. IV)The Earl of. Kintore.]APPENDICES. A.—The University of. Adelaide. B.—The Security for. Bonded Debt of the Colony. C.—Changes of. Government. D.—Great Industries of.
South Australia. E.—The Agricultural. College, Roseworthy. F.—The. Royal Agricultural and Horticultural Society of South. Australia. Index[MAP - at end]DIAGRAM SHEWING LANDS SOLD BETWEEN THE YEARS 1. AND JUNE. 1. 89. 2THE HISTORYOFSOUTH AUSTRALIA{Page 1}CHAPTER XII. INTERIM ADMINISTRATION OF LIEUTENANT- COLONEL HAMLEY. FEBRUARY 2. 0TH, 1.
FEBRUARY 1. 6TH, 1. Dissolution.—Reform and. Protection.—Troublous Times.—The Northern. Territory.—Public.
Finances.—Crisis- mongering.—The "St. George of the. Land Reformers."—The "Battle of the. Areas."—Review. LIEUTENANT- COLONEL Francis Gilbert Hamley. Majesty's forces.
Queen's Own—Regiment) in the colony at the time. Sir Dominick Daly's death, was sworn in as acting Governor on.
February, 1. 86. 8, and on the 2. March he dissolved. House of Assembly by proclamation. Writs for the election of. April. to the 7th of May, thus giving candidates defeated in one. The two leading questions before the electors were Land Reform. Protection. As regarded the former there were so many schemes.
Those in. favour of deferred payments for land were believed to constitute. Dutch auction, tender, and other modes met. The protection party. The total number of candidates to fill the thirty- six places.
The first session of the fifth Parliament was opened by the. Governor on the 3. July, 1. 86. 8, and in his inaugural. Governor, and also to the attempt on the life of the. Duke of Edinburgh at Sydney. Then followed a comprehensive sketch.
Parliament. The sketch included special reference to the temporary. Committee appointed to inquire. Captain Cadell's roseate- hued reports of the Northern Territory. Parliament in respect of the contracts. Territory. Of land reform he spoke but briefly, merely. Parliament. whereby greater facilities would be afforded to purchasers for.
Then followed a long list of other. In due course Mr. G. S. Kingston was again unanimously elected. Speaker, the reply to the Address was carried in both Houses. But it. soon became apparent that the session would not, like the. Ministry. Within six days.
Mr. Carr to carry a vote of censure. Ministry on the state of affairs relating to laud in. Northern Territory, but it was unsuccessful. A number of resolutions relating to the Northern Territory.
Treasurer a few days later, dealing. Extension of time for selection of laud.(2) An increased area of land (2. A still further increase of 3.