It was in midsummer of 1816
that a young and, if her middle
age told truly of her youth, a
beautiful English woman opened a
little school in what was then
the upper part of the city of
New York. Some twenty years
before, there had come to seek
their fortune in the growing
town on Manhattan Island, a
sturdy Kentish family named
Boorman.
Active citizens of their new
home they proved, and two of the
children, Esther and James, we
know had more than common weight
and influence. Early in life
Esther Boorman Smith found
herself with two little
daughters to support, and with
few enough occupations to choose
from. Not even women teachers
were needed as they are today,
for the public free school was
still an experiment and but two
existed in the city. Small
private schools there were
a-plenty, for the most part
short-lived ventures, and though
often carried on by women, most
of the instructors were men.
Indeed,
in this very year was opened a
most promising school under the
patronage of Drs. Gardiner
Spring and J.B. Romeyne and
George Griffin, Esq., two of the
most influential clergymen and
one of the most noted lawyers of
the time. However, 1816 was a
good year in the new land, and
so there appeared in the
"Evening Post" for July 11 the
following advertisement: "Mrs.
E. Smith's establishment for the
board and tuition of young
ladies, No. 3 Hudson Square, is
now in readiness for the
reception of pupils as boarders
or day boarders. The different
branches of education by the
most approved masters. Further
information may be had on
application to Mrs. S., and
those to whom she is unknown are
respectfully referred to the
following gentlemen: the Rev.
Dr. Mason, Samuel Boyd, Esq., D.
J.H. Rogers, and Peter Radcliff,
Esq."
Esther Smith is described in
later years as not only a very
beautiful woman, but of great
charm of manner, of marvelous
patience, and without thought of
self. A lovable personality
this, which well explains the
devotion she won from her own
family. But she must have had as
well, in those early days,
qualities that made for business
success. Backed and encouraged
as she always was by her
brother, James Boorman, she had
evidently her share of the canny
foresight and determination that
soon made this young man one of
the powerful merchants of the
town. One recognize his unerring
and daring real estate sense in
the location of the little
school near the new church. St.
John-in-the-fields, as it was
fittingly named. It is described
as a "missionary enterprise, the
church set on the outskirts of
civilization opposite a dreary
marsh, covered with brambles and
bulrushes and tenanted with
frogs and water-snakes." The
tract was part of the Anneke
Jans farm, and whether a
missionary enterprise or not,
Mrs. Smith was quite right in
believing that Trinity
Corporation knew, as usual what
it was doing with its property.
Nevertheless,
by the early twenties this had
become one of the most select
and delightful regions of the
town. The stately church looked
down on stately homes, and the
marsh and the frogs were of the
past. General Schuyler, John
Ericsson, Dr. Mason, and the
family of Alexander Hamilton,
were among those who dwelt in
the broad Flemish brick houses
with their brown stone porticos
and fine iron railings and
wrens, bluebirds and orioles,
built undisturbed, and where old
Cisco the negro gardener
puttered peacefully among his
trees and flowers.
Although the first month brought
but one pupil, gradually came
more, and it is curious to note,
by means of the advertising
columns, the rise and
disappearance of school after
school, while that of "Mrs. E.
Smith" persists, seemingly with
so few vicissitudes that not
only does she never deign in her
notices to explain what is
taught or how, or at what
prices, but she now and then
serenely omits the address, sure
that every one knows where to
find her "establishment for
young ladies." One almost wishes
she had been a little less
successful, or a little less
dignified, whichever it were.
We could have gleaned much
knowledge had she been as
communicative as Miss Eliza
Woffendale, who for years
announced her "pleasure in
instructing young lady boarders"
at forty dollars per quarter; or
as Miss Oran, of whose writing
master, Mr. Dolbeare, "a
beautiful hand may be acquired
in one quarter"; or as those
trustees of the Female High
School, that capstone of
feminine education, who offered
"English, French, composition,
rhetoric, penmanship,
arithmetic, algebra, and the
other branches of mathematics
bookkeeping if required, ancient
and modern history, natural,
experimental and moral
philosophy, plain, fine, and
ornamental needlework," at six
dollars a quarter without
French, and fourteen with.
Despite the reserve of the Smith
advertisements, from these
contemporary schools and from
our knowledge of the city of
those days one may guess a
little of the life at 3 Hudson
Square. Vauxhall, a small
edition of the London
playground, was near by. Castle
Garden, than a similar amusement
place, and Poole's Museum were
in their heyday. The shops
advertised bombazine, juniper
berries, and commodities of
which we now know hardly the
names and must guess the use.
The bookstores provided for the
schools red and black ink powder
and sand and quills, Peter
Parley's Arithmetic, Uncle Jacob
Abbott's Lessons, Goodrich's
History, and Morse's Geography,
and announced the arrival from
the other side of Jane Porter's
newest novel and the opening
chapters of "Quentin Durward."
Probably some of Mrs. Smith's
boarding pupils came from New
Jersey; for, even after the
opening of Fulton's first ferry,
in 1822, young ladies did not
cross the Hudson daily. We know
that some came from up the
State, for these had to go home
before the river closed in the
early winter, returning when the
ice broke in the spring.
Apparently there was a short
vacation in April and one in
August, schools announcing their
opening in May and in September.
In the earliest years of the
school, before the park was in
order, there was skating in
Hudson Square, and so near was
it to the country that a
customary spring treat was a
trip to a farm at Broadway and
Fourth Street to gather
strawberries.
September fifth, 1822, the
"Post" has this announcement:
"Mrs. Smith's boarding school
will be opened on Wednesday, the
18th instant, at the house on
the Eighth Avenue, formerly
occupied by Mrs. Brute, about a
half mile above Love Lane,
between the dwellings of Richard
Harris, Esq., and the Messrs.
Moses. Should the parents of any
of her day scholars be desirous
of a temporary residence for
them that they may enter
immediately on their studies,
Mrs. Smith will be able to
receive a few. Letters addressed
to Mrs. Smith through the Post
Office will be attended to."
Love Lane was well out in the
country by Chelsea Village,
running into Eighth Avenue from
the Bloomingdale Road, near what
is now Twenty-first Street. So
this new house was in the
Thirties, then open country,
with fields sloping down to the
river. Probably this move was on
account of the yellow fever
epidemic, so severe that season
as to force the shutting off of
a portion of the city to the
south of Hudson Square.
In 1834 Mrs. Smith reopened her
school "at the corner of Beach
and Varick Streets, say 23
Varick Street." This odd
indecision as to the number was
settled before the year's
directory was published, for in
that Mrs. Smith appears with
twenty other of the "principal
female seminaries of the city."
Only one of these was as far
uptown as St. Mark's Place.
James Boorman had by this time
become one of the notable men of
the city. He had been active in
founding the University of the
City of New York and he was now
interested in the improvement of
the region where the new college
was building at Seventh Street.
The ancient Potter's Field and
gallows ground had been turned
into Washington Square and a
number of wealthy men were
building homes about its freshly
laid out lawns and walks. Mr.
Boorman built the fine old house
of light red brick with white
trimming, still standing at the
eastern corner of Fifth Avenue
and the Square, and above two
more houses, 1 and 3 Fifth
Avenue for his sister's school.
In September, 1835, the school
opened in this new home, and it
was in this year also that there
came a piece of rare good
fortune not only to Mrs. Smith,
to whom it meant years of warm
friendship, but to thousands of
young women who, in the next
thirty years, were to come under
the new teacher's strong and
wise influence. Lucy Green had
been a pupil in the school and
before that had studied under
Lucretia Bancroft, sister of the
historian, and Dorothea L. Dihat
pioneer of prison reform, and
she shared their qualities of
earnestness and high principle.
She had, too, the advantage, at
that time uncommon for women, of
a season of foreign travel.
Cholera had visited the city
severely in 1834, and this may
have been the "severe contagious
illness" which we are told had
for a time a serious effect on
the prosperity of the school.
Certainly the strictest economy
was at this time needful before
the continued success of the
enterprise that had served the
city for twenty years was
assured. What is doubtless Mrs.
Smith's last advertisement
appeared in March, 1838. The
change of the school year points
to the change in town life, in
which the summer had become
definitely holiday time. It
reads: "Mrs. E. Smith, formerly
of Hudson Square, deems it
essential to announce that she
is about to relinquish her
school as reported, but that it
will be continued under her
personal superintendence for a
limited number of pupils.
Mrs. Smith has adopted the
system of three terms in the
year of full three months each,
the vacation being from the
first of July to the twentieth
of September." The following
season the notice is from the
Misses Lucy M. and Mary R.
Green, who, "having taken the
establishment for many years
conducted by Mrs. E. Smith,
first in Hudson Square and since
in its present location, will
recommence the school at the
close of the vacation on
Tuesday, Sept. 10th. Miss Lucy
M. Green has held responsible
situations with Mrs. Smith
during the last four years, and
it will be the care of the
Misses Green substantially to
preserve the regulations and
course of instruction heretofore
observed." Though there be no
one left now to tell us of
personal knowledge what manner
of teacher was the head mistress
who ruled the school through its
first quarter century, it needs
not the statement in William
Allen Butler's sketch of Miss
Green to assure us that "it
numbered among its pupils the
daughters of many of the leading
men of the city and elsewhere,
who valued the moral and
religious tone which
characterized the life and
activities of the school, as
well as the thorough instruction
which it imparted."
The foundation was ready for the
new builder, and she was
eminently fitted to her task.
The sister, Mary Green, had
charge of the younger children,
but it is Miss Lucy who lives so
vividly in the memory of all who
knew her. Strict and severe she
was, absolutely just, and with a
fund of tenderness hidden
beneath her outward manner and a
sunny smile that her pupils
never forgot. Shallowness and
vanity were to her the
unforgivable sins, and plain
clothing, no jewelry, and simple
pleasures figured large in her
creed. Quakerlike in dress,
wearing always cloth gowns of
ankle length, and heelless
shoes, her only ornament her
beautiful hair, she was a
noticeable and impressive figure
in those decades of hoop-skirts
and furbelows.
Again there had been no mistake
in the choice of location.
Washington Square and lower
Fifth Avenue became, James
Boorman and his confreres
intended they should, the most
notable residential section of
the town, and the school, in its
broad, generous, dignified brick
building (for No. 3 was given up
and No. 1 enlarged), was for the
next thirty years perhaps easily
the leading school for girls in
the city. It was not so made,
however, by any deference to
fashion or luxury. Indeed, a
simplicity that may bespeak
still scant means is in that
early requirement that at the
call to dinner each young lady
should carry her chair from the
school to the dining-room, and
carry it, moreover, "quietly and
in a genteel manner," and in
those wash-rooms furnished with
long wooden sinks, white
crockery bowls, and large tin
dippers.
To quote again from Mr. Butler,
"It was wholly foreign to the
purpose of Miss Green to give
the character or repute of a
fashionable school to the
institution...Her aim was rather
to mould and train the minds
that came under her care by
developing the highest sense of
duty in the exercise of every
faculty...She impressed her own
personality upon the scholars,
particularly in the direction of
the education of the conscience
and the strengthening of
principle." Rigid though her
requirements were, in fact,
because of their unyielding
independence and high idealism,
the repute of the school grew,
and for years boarders and day
pupils numbered between two and
three hundred.
With the highest ideals of the
position and the power of woman
in the home, Miss Green sought
to train for the home, and she
trained well and wisely in her
generation: indeed, in some ways
beyond her generation. Text-book
and lecturer did not satisfy
her. Her girls were expected to
look further and were familiar
figures at the New York Society
Library, then around the block
in University Place, and the
Astor Library in Lafayette
Place. French, German, Italian,
Latin, were taught, and if Greek
were omitted, the reading of the
Iliad in English was a part of
the course in literature. How
little she inclined toward easy
lessons may be gathered by this
extract from the journal of her
brother, Andrew H. Green, whose
advice and aid counted for much
in the school and who was in
1844 teaching a class in
American History. He had been
planning, he writes, a set of
lectures "on the constitution
and jurisprudence of our
country, making them rather
general and simple. To do this
philosophically I shall have to
commence about the beginning of
the fourteenth century and take
a review of all the nations of
Europe at this date, gradually
bringing the features in each
which bear on the formation of
society in this country together
till I come to the Declaration
of Independence. Then the course
will be clear." A large
proposition this, and one does
not wonder that he seems
doubtful of accomplishing it.
Herself an excellent teacher,
Miss Green knew how to choose
her helpers. Many came from the
Union Theological Seminary, thus
keeping the tradition of the
school that had always been
affiliated with the Presbyterian
and Dutch elements in the city.
Among the men and women noted in
their day, or whose names are
still familiar, are those of Dr.
George B. Cheever, eloquent
preacher of the Church of the
Puritans and doughty temperance
fighter; Henry J. Raymond,
founder of the "Times"; Annie
Botta, leader of perhaps the
only salon New York ever
possessed; Felix Foresti,
professor at both the University
and Columbia; Clarence Cook;
Lyman Abbott; and Elihu Root,
then a young man fresh from
college, whose classes had to be
duly chaperoned.
In 1867 came a new teacher, a
tall young lady, dark-haired and
keen-eyed. Reared among the
Orange County hills, she had
been educated at the historic
Montgomery Academy, which, still
doing this country good service,
was already a quarter century
old when 3 Hudson Square
welcomed its lone scholar. The
Academy had sent generations of
students out into the world
before one class gave two
remarkable educators to this
city, Frances E. Graham, and her
youthful rival in mathematics,
the beloved Dean Van Amringe of
Columbia. Miss Green, in the
height of her success, after
thirty busy and honored years
was ready to retire to the quiet
country home in Massachusetts.
After watching her new helper
two years she made up her mind
that here she had found one of
the force and the will to carry
on her work. The proposition was
made to the young teacher, to
whom, to quote from Miss
Margaret M. Graham, "this honor
was so unexpected that she at
first declined, but after much
thought and persuasion consented
and with her sisters endeavored
carefully to carry out the ideas
of her predecessors."
There must have been a kinship
in character between these two,
both gentlewomen of the old
school, for the words in which
they are described by their
pupils today are curiously
alike. Miss Graham, too, was
severe, strict, but absolutely
just, of stern principle, of
high ideals, while beneath a
precise manner lay a warm
sympathy and understanding. But
the likeness did not extend to
appearance. The new head
mistress was tall, slender,
stately, and though one can
hardly imagine her in hoops or
frills, her black silk gown, the
rustle of which was a warning to
every lazy girl within hearing,
belonged to her type quite as
did Miss Lucy's short cloth
frock to hers.
Various staid customs that long
persisted under the Misses
Graham, must, one fancies, have
come down from the old regime.
That clearing of the Sunday
supper table, when the dishes
were passed from hand to hand
till gathered in assorted piles
at the lower end of the long
line, surely came from a simpler
day. Improving topics were
introduced from time to time at
meals, and there has been
preserved a classic reply from
one gentle and diffident maiden
to the question, "What would you
do were you thrown on your own
resources tomorrow?" "I think I
should go and live with Uncle
John" was her happy solution. If
these pupils were from the
"first families," this did not
relieve the teachers of care of
more than minds and morals, and
the youngsters of the primary
department were met at the door
by a kindly guardian whom they
greeted with an "obligatory
grin" and turned up nails,
before the password, "J'ai dix,"
Mademoiselle," which meant that
they were on time and in order,
let them enter. The morning
greeting, in which the pupils,
rising at their desks, repeated
in unison, "Good morning, Miss
Graham," and then answered to
the roll-call by a memorized
verse of the Bible, was an
ancient function.
But the Sunday of the boarding
pupils, the "young ladies of the
family," as they were always
called, was the most
characteristic feature of the
Green and Graham training. The
day began with morning prayers
at half-past seven, the pupils
reading in turn, generally more
than once, singing and prayer
closing the exercises. After
breakfast at eight the pupils
attended to their rooms as
usual, then came down for the
Bible class, which lasted till
the first church bell. All
walked in procession to the
First Presbyterian Church, save
the few who stopped on the way
at the Church of the Ascension.
The few moments between service
and dinner were to be employed
in the learning of hymns.
At the close of dinner each
young woman was expected to give
"a thought from the sermon,"
altogether the most dreaded item
in the day's program, calling as
it did for a quotation from a
sermon that one's teacher also
had heard. There followed a
brief interval into which could
be tucked another verse of one's
hymn! The afternoon Bible class
closed with the first bell for
afternoon service, and on
returning from church, if one
were wise, one studied one's
hymn till evening prayers, which
preceded the half-past six
supper. After supper, with
chairs pushed back from the
table, each girl recited the
hymn that had safely occupied
all the leisure moments of the
day. "When this was over,"
comments an old student, "great
peace reigned in our hearts, for
with the exception of hymn
singing in the ladies' parlor
till early bedtime the program
for the day was ended."
One would like to know if the
school text with which each
newcomer in the Green and the
Graham schools had to answer to
her name, were learned also in
Hudson Square. One somehow
fancies that a very weary
teacher chose it with a grim
enjoyment of the second clause.
"But as touching brotherly love
ye need not that I write unto
you, for ye yourselves are
taught of God to love one
another. Study to be quiet and
to do your own business and to
work with your own hands as we
have commanded you, that ye may
walk honestly toward them that
are without, and that ye may
have lack of nothing."
That of which custom was but the
index, the spirit and aim of the
old school, continued unchanged;
and this it was that held so
many of the old patrons and
brought to the Misses Graham
children and grandchildren of
the Green and the Smith
connections. To Miss Graham as
to Miss Green, religion was the
main-spring of conduct and the
Bible the absolute guide of
daily life. Though the boarders
had naturally more Bible
training than the day scholars,
no one was long under the Graham
influence without feeling the
religious element that entered
every department of the school
life. A professor who had known
Miss Graham well, when asked for
some analysis of her as an
educator, answered instantly,
"She was a character builder,"
and in these words he precisely
described her power.
Scholarship, attainment, these
were good, but of value only as
the result of honest work and as
used for high purpose.
No more than their predecessors
did the Misses Graham bid for
notice by advertising success or
numbers, or yielding their views
of sound training. Indeed, the
advertising sense of both these
principals was so ill developed
that the daily walks of the
"young ladies of the family"
were taken in two divisions lest
the whole number in line,
swinging briskly along the
Avenue, should attract too much
attention. The naive criticism
of one disappointed pupil
describes the attitude of the
school. "There's no style here,"
complained the dissatisfied
damsel. "The main things thought
of are study and courteous
behavior."
But if the aims of the teachers
were the same, the city had
altered almost beyond
recognition. When in 1881 the
move was made to No. 63, the
stately house at Avenue, the
lower avenue had passed its
prime, and no longer could any
one region boast the position it
had held. Neither were schools
of advanced standing any longer
rare, and methods were changing.
The preparatory school was
taking the place of the school
of general training, for the
woman's college had come. With
it came better trained women
teachers and the invasion of
women into the field of men was
being gently and surely
accomplished in the private
schools long before the
portentous phrase had terrified
the timid. Fortunately the
invasion was not entirely
complete, and there were still
lecturers from outside.
There
was Professor Braman, so gentle,
so frail, seemingly so old, that
from his looks one fancied he
might have taught "natural and
experimental philosophy" in the
schoolroom at Hudson Square.
There was still Clarence Cook,
most inspiring, most
unsystematic of lecturers, who
managed to fit several hours
with da Vinci's sketchbooks into
his course in English
literature. Professor Fiske
delivered some of his finest
lectures from a tiny platform,
quite too small for his portly
person; and among the later men
were Professor Means, Professor
Fairchild, Dr. Leighton
Williams, and Dr. John D.
Quackenbos. But Mr. Tavenor, who
taught Miss Green's young ladies
to read with expression, and the
sarcastic Mr. Wilder, who
frightened the timid out of what
expression they might naturally
have had, and was rewarded by
enthusiastic admiration, had
long given place to their
successors.
Mr. Jackson, who taught a
fine, legible Italian hand, as
many of his old pupils can
testify today, had vanished, and
Mr. Dolmage, too, had retired
from the arduous business of
watching his pupils imitate his
neatly written copies. The
"English angular" and Mrs.
Skinner for a time reigned in
their stead, and helped to break
the precedent that had come down
from the beginning of the
century, when, to judge by the
advertisements, penmanship was
entirely a masculine art. Madame
Lancon held Monsieur Aspin's
desk, and never French master
inspired more awe than did that
stern Huguenot lady. French was
a specialty under both Miss
Green and Miss Graham. It was
the rule that all conversation
between pupils during the school
hours must be in French, and one
must one's self report failure
to obey, a regulation that
caused those of tender
conscience anxious searchings of
memory before the roll-call.
Mademoiselle Giobe in early
days, and later the genial
Madame English and then Madame
Wainwright, the friend of the
later generation of students,
presided at the daily afternoon
conversation hours, from four to
five and five to six, when the
girls brought their mending and
had their stitches supervised
along with their accent and
their grammar.
The city did not stop changing
in 1881. It went on faster and
faster. In 1893 the new house at
Seventy-second Street and
Broadway seemed a permanent
location, but in fourteen years
business had crept close, making
it untenable, and the move was
made to the present beautiful
home at 42 Riverside Drive. It
was in 1910, after forty years
of devoted labor, that the
Misses Graham retired, giving up
the school to Mr.and Mrs. Miner.
Mrs. Miner, as Miss White, had
been a successful teacher in the
school some years before, so
that for the third time it was
handed on to one who knew and
respected its traditions and its
aims.