FOUR former towns of Westchester
County and parts of two others
make up the Borough of The
Bronx. Only two of the towns,
Westchester and Eastchester,
antedate the Revolution ; the
others were created by division
and separation. Pelham came into
existence in 1 788 (at the time
when, under the State
government, Westchester and
Eastchester were constituted
towns of Westchester County);
West Farms dates from 1846,
Morrisania from 1855, and
Kingsbridge from 1872, the
latter having been set off as a
separate town only two years
before its annexation to New
York. Besides Kingsbridge,
Morrisania and West Farms were
taken into the city at the
beginning of 1874; Westchester
and parts of Eastchester and
Pelham were annexed in 1895.
Through the earlier annexation
eight grammar and six primary
schools, and through the later
six grammar and three primary
schools were added to the New
York system.
Westchester and Eastchester were
not settled by the Dutch, and,
so far as the early records can
be traced, there was not, in the
former at least, the same zeal
for the school and the
schoolmaster in the early days
as we have found in the Dutch
settlements on Manhattan Island
and Long Island. The early
schools were church schools, and
it is not easy to determine how
deeply the idea of the free
school had taken root. In one
case it is stated that the
schoolmaster received what the
parents of the pupils paid ; the
probabilities are that the
children of the poor received
free instruction.
In Westchester the earliest
reference to a school is found
after the year 1700. In
Eastchester there was an earlier
beginning. The " agreement "
made by the settlers of that
town soon after they took up
their abode there, in 1664,
contained an article to the
effect " That provision be
endeavored for education of
children, and then encouragement
be given unto any that shall
take pains according to our
former way of rating." According
to Scharf's History of
Westchester County? the
reference in the last clause
quoted was to the collective
education of children to which
they had been accustomed in
Connecticut.
Bolton states, in his History of
the County of Westchester, that
" The first school-house [in
Eastchester] was erected in
1683, for at a public meeting of
the inhabitants, held on the
I5th of October of that year, it
was ordered ' that a
school-house be erected upon a
site between the property of
Richard Shute and William Haiden,
and encouragement given to Mr.
Morgan Jones to become the
school-master.' " He adds that "
the building occupied the site
of the present village
school-house."
Mr. Jones, who in 1680 was
officiating as minister in the
village of Westchester, does not
appear to have yielded to the
"encouragement." On this point
Scharf says : " The
encouragement then given to Mr.
Morgan to be their school-master
did not, it would seem, add any
more to his haste to comply with
their wishes than the call,
three years previous, to be
their minister."
This historian states that the
erection of a schoolhouse was
not determined upon until 1683,
and intimates a doubt as to
whether it had actually been
built in 1697. However that may
be, in 1696 Benjamin Collier is
recorded as serving in the
office of schoolmaster.
A few years later a schoolhouse
must have been provided, for in
1713 " two overseers of y"
school in y town " were
appointed. That it did not meet
the wants of the town
indefinitely is evident from
action taken in 1726, when it
was agreed to vote at a public
town meeting that a lot of land
be laid out " for to build a
school-house thereon," " out of
the common," and that the
schoolhouse be built " twenty
foot long and fourteen foot
wide, and seven foot between
joyntts in height." In this
spacious edifice Mr. Delpech was
carrying on the work of a
teacher in 1728, and he was
spoken of by the minister as
"very well adapted and fitted
for that business, and as well
spoken of as being diligent in
it." His income was " what the
parents of the children taught
do give."
From this time until after the
Revolutionary period the records
are missing. In 1797 there were
four schools in the entire town.
In Westchester, where the first
settlement was made in 1654,the
establishment of a school
appears to have been due to the
famous British Society for the
Propagation of the Gospel in
Foreign Parts. In 1702 the Rev.
John Bartow was sent by this
Society as a missionary to
Westchester, and on October 30,
1709, we find him writing to the
Society, " We want very much a
fixed school at Westchester,"
and recommending Daniel Clark as
a person worthy of employment, "
being of good report, a constant
communicant, and being a
clergyman's son, has had a pious
and learned education." Clark
(the name is also spelled
Clarke) was engaged, and was the
teacher from 1710 to 1713. He
was preceded, in 1709, by Edward
Fitzgerald, and followed by
Charles Glover. Each of these
three schoolmasters received a
salary of£18 per annum.
The Society's abstracts for 1713
contain the following with
reference to the last-named : "
Mr. Charles Glover is appointed
schoolmaster at Westchester,
with a salary of £18 per annum,
as he is recommended under the
character of a person sober and
diligent, well affected toward
the Church of England, and
competently skilled in reading,
writing, arithmetic, psalmody
and the Latin tongue." Glover
remained until 1719, when he was
succeeded by William Forster,
who is mentioned repeatedly in
the records of the Society. The
first reference to him, in
I719,is as follows: "To Mr.
William Forster, schoolmaster at
Westchester, who has been
recommended as a person very
well qualified to instruct the
youth in the principles of
religion and virtue, ten pounds
per annum is allowed ; and a
gratuity of £10 has been given
him, in consideration of his
past services and his present
circumstances."
As might be expected, a
schoolmaster in the employ of
the venerable Society above
mentioned had many religious
duties to perform, though he
does not appear to have been
undertaker, sexton, and
gravedigger, as was the
schoolmaster in the Dutch
communities. For instance, in
1719, Mr. Forster reported that
"he has at present thirty-five
scholars, whom he catechizes
every Saturday, and also every
Sunday that Mr. Bartow goes to
another part of the parish,
together with all others who
will attend, and has good
success ; which is also attested
by the minister and chief
inhabitants of Westchester." A
later entry is to the effect
that Mr. Forster " takes all the
care he can of the children
which are sent to him, and has
upwards of thirty scholars,
which he instructs in the Church
Catechism."
An entry somewhat more
interesting is found in the year
1723, when Mr. Forster announces
that "the number of his scholars
is as usual, and that he has
very good success in his
teaching, and that they are this
summer building a new
schoolhouse ; and he is raising
an annual subscription for
repairing and furnishing the
church."
No other schoolmaster's name is
found until I743. Beginning with
that year, they were as follows
: 1743, Basil Bartow ;1764,
Nathaniel Seabury; 1768, George
Youngs; 1774, Mr.Gott. The
salary is put down as £10 in
each case.
Under the State government,
after the Revolutionary War, the
towns of Westchester County, as
a whole, manifested a good
degree of interest in
educational matters. By the "
Act for the encouragement of
schools," adopted in 1795, as
stated in an earlier chapter,
the State appropriated .£20,000
each year for five years for
school purposes, and Westchester
County received as its quota
.£1192. The several towns
promptly voted an appropriation
equal to one-half of the amount
received from the State, and
School Commissioners were
appointed to look after the
details. An interesting paper
formerly on file in the office
of the Town Clerk of Eastchester
had reference to this money. It
bore the date June 19, 1795, and
read : " We the Supervisors of
the County of Westchester, ...
do certify to the Town of
Eastchester that the
apportionment of money by us
allotted to the said Town by
virtue of the act aforesaid [the
act of 1795], is thirty-seven
pounds twelve shillings and
seven pence."
"Just as readily, in 1812, when
an equal sum to the
appropriation by the State was
in a new Act asked of each town,
the vote was readily given, and
the proper officials named.
During this period, throughout
the county, school-houses were
being restored or re-erected."
The territory annexed to the
former city of New York in 1874
became the Twenty-third and
Twenty-fourth Wards, and was
long known as the Annexed
District. Its schools passed
directly under the control of
the Board of Education, without
any change in the membership of
that body ; the new wards formed
an additional school district,
for which Inspectors were
appointed by the Mayor, and
Trustees by the Board of
Education. Before the annexation
there were four local Boards of
Education in what became the
Annexed District : one for
Morrisania and one for
Kingsbridge, while in West Farms
there were two Boards, one for
each of the school districts.
The annexation in 1895 caused no
change in the school officers of
the Twenty-fourth Ward.