New York stands at the head
of all American cities in the
excellence and extent of its
system of public education. It
has one free college, fifty-five
ward or grammar schools, forty
primary schools, and ten colored
schools. The ward schools are
divided into three departments,
primary, male, and female, and
the others into two, one for
each sex.
The buildings
are generally of brick,
tastefully trimmed with
freestone or granite, and are
amongst the handsomest in the
city. They are commodious, and
in every respect equal to the
demand upon them. The rooms are
large, airy, and neat. The
building is well warmed and
ventilated, and every care is
taken to render the teachers and
pupils as comfortable as
possible.
The number of
teachers is between two thousand
five hundred and three thousand,
and the number of children is
near three hundred thousand. A
janitor resides in each
building, and is responsible for
its cleanliness and
healthfulness. The course of
study is most thorough. Pupils
enter the primary classes, and
pass through the various grades
of the primary and grammar
schools, until the course is
finished. Then the college of
the City of New York is opened
to all who desire to enter it,
who have passed regularly and
honorably through the lower
schools. In this institution all
the branches of a thorough and
complete collegiate course are
taught. Horace Webster, L. L.
D., is the president of the
college, and the faculty
embraces some of the most
learned men in the city.
The institution grants
diplomas, confers degrees, and
is entitled to and exercises all
the privileges of a first-class
college. The whole system is
free to all the children of the
city, whose parents choose to
avail themselves of it. Books
and everything needed are
furnished without charge, and no
pains are spared to render the
course as thorough and
beneficial as possible. The
pupil is put to no expense,
whatever, but is required to
maintain habits of cleanliness
and neatness. The sexes are
provided with separate
apartments, and enter the
building by different doors. In
some localities night schools
are provided, for those who
cannot be present at the day
sessions, and are well attended.
Many cash and errand boys and
clerks, porters, drivers, and
others gladly avail themselves
of this means of acquiring
knowledge.
The cost to the city of this
magnificent system, is between
two and a half and three
millions of dollars annually. It
is a heavy tax upon the
municipal treasury, but it is
gladly borne, for it saves the
metropolis from those hordes of
idle, ignorant men and women
which are the curse of all great
cities. The very poorest men or
women can thus give to their
children the priceless boon of
knowledge, of which their youth
was deprived. Profiting by the
advantage thus acquired, these
little ones, in after years, may
rise to fame and fortune. Thus
not only the metropolis but the
whole country reaps the
blessings of this magnificent
system of free education.
The best proof of its excellence
lies in the fact that, a short
time since, a Committee,
appointed by the authorities of
the city of Boston, for the
purpose of inquiring into the
public school systems of other
American cities, with a view to
improving that of the "Hub,"
stated in their report, that
they regarded the system in
practice in the city of New
York, as the best in the world,
and recommended that the school
system of Boston be modeled upon
the same plan.
Ample as are our means of
diffusing knowledge, however,
they must still be increased.
They must be made to reach those
lower portions of humanity, in
behalf of which the Mission
Schools of the great city are
doing such noble work. Not until
this is done, will the system be
perfect.