History of Hopedale Public Schools
backward look into educational affairs in this district. This takes us to the time when Hopedale was part of the mother town of Mendon, a sparsely populated region known as The Dale. The first record of a school house comes from Dr. Metcalf’s Annals of the Town of Mendon: “1709, Jan. 8. At a public town meeting it was voted to erect a school house twenty feet in length, sixteen feet wide and seven feet between joints. This was the first school house built, and was situated upon the hill below Deacon Warfield’s house, being, as near as can be ascertained, upon the site of the family cemetery of the Messrs. George.” As the district was widespread, it was voted in 1714 that school be kept six months in the center of town and “the other six months upon the out scirts of the town.” These sessions kept in different parts of the town were called moving schools. High standards in the way of teacher were the rule. Grindal Rawson, Harvard graduate, was one of the earliest. Mr. Dorr’s son, Joseph, and Capt. Eleazer Taft’s son, Moses, both Harvard men, were chosen “to Keep School by Spells as they can agree with them at a reasonable rate, for this present year.” A Latin master was also proposed in addition to one to teach the “Children to Reed, writ and cifer,” but whether such was provided history does not tell. At a town meeting in May 1732, it was voted to choose “School Dames (for the first time) to keep School in the Out Skirts of the Town,” and thirty pounds was allowed for that purpose. In 1747, the town agreed to build a new school house, “the second and only school house in the town, the old one having been sold to Samuel Thayer.” The Mendon records tell that, in a meeting held May 25th, 1750, it was voted, “to build a School House near the East Precinct Meeting House for ye use of the Town, and that the interest money arising from the sale of the School lands be equally divided between the two precincts.” On the site of the Roman Catholic Church in Hopedale, formerly the high school lot, there was a village school. According to Adin Ballou’s Milford history, the school was held “in an ancient domicil built by Seth Chapin, jun.” This is of especial interest to us, for here our Milford Revolutionary hero, Alexander Scammel, afterwards on Gen. Washington’s staff, taught while still a student at Harvard. Milford left the parent-town of Mendon in 1780, so schools of what is now Hopedale were in the town of Milford. In the year 1790 or about this date, the South Milford District including what is now Hopedale, “had an original School house of very humble pretensions, which stood at the southwest corner of the graveyard, on the spot now occupied by the Warfield lots and monuments, or thereabouts.” Its successor, ten rods farther south, was built, probably in 1814. The contract for the construction was three hundred dollars. The American flag, was now flying over school-houses and school expenses were paid in dollars, instead of pounds. In 1841, Hopedale was founded by a small band of men and women led by Adin Ballou. This group had dreams of building a community where all would share in the benefits of toil. One of the first articles in their constitution begins, “All the children and youth connected with any Community in this Association shall be educated in the most approved manner…” The ideas along educational lines were ahead of the times in many ways, such as having pre-school training, music, and art. School was held in the Old House where members of Fraternal Community #1 were living, but as soon as a new building could be put up, the school was held there. In 1844, the first school in the Hopedale Community was opened. By this time the Community had found this name for the Dale. The building was called the School-House Chapel and was used as a meeting house as well as a school. This well-built structure was taken down this year, 1955, after being used for many years in the form of tenements. It was used as a school until 1868. (The year Chapel Street School opened.) The Hopedale Community took all financial responsibility for running their school, although paying school taxes as citizens of Milford. In 1847, the Hopedale School became the Twelfth District of the Milford school system. To quote from the Milford history, “No. 12, Hopedale, owned no schoolhouse. It hired the old Schoolhouse Chapel, so called, for some years.” A teacher, especially successful and beloved, was the daughter of the leader of the Community, Miss Abbie Ballou. She had attended the State Normal School, then at West Newton. One of her pupils wrote of his dreams for the future, “He wished he would live to be one hundred and go to school to Miss Abbie every day of his life.” A visit to this Hopedale school by a member of the school committee resulted in a most favorable report: “The scholars at Hopedale could not have shown, at their age, such readiness in answering difficult questions, and passed so accurately through the long processes of mental arithmetic, and they certainly would not have shown such interest, if there had not been a deep, strong and hearty influence felt and exerted at home.” The Milford High School was built and ready for use in 1851. Some pupils from Hopedale attended until the year 1889 when Hopedale had its own high school. (Actually there are Hopedale School Committee reports in the town report, beginning in 1887 that mention Hopedale having a high school and reporting on graduations. There were two graduates in 1887 and one in 1888. Evidently some Hopedale students who had started high school in Milford, remained there until they graduated. As is mentioned below, classes were held in the Hopedale town hall until Hopedale’s first high school was completed in 1889.) After 1886, when Hopedale became an independent town, such pupils paid one dollar per week tuition. It is interesting to note that Hopedale’s founder, Adin Ballou, was on the building committee of the Milford High School. In 1868, the Hopedale Grammar and Primary Schoolhouse was completed. The description reads, “It is of wood, one story, with dimensions affording accommodation for both a grammar and a primary school.” The cost of the site, construction, fixtures, etc., was $5,000. It was built by the town (the town of Milford, at that time) into whose hands the public school property had by this time passed. This structure remains as part of the Chapel School, named for the site, designated by the Hopedale Community as Chapel Square. (Just to be clear on this, there have been three schools on the block between Chapel and Freedom streets. The first was the chapel and school of the Hopedale Community. The second was the one referred to in this paragraph, which at some point was enlarged to have two stories. The third was the Dutcher Street School.) Upon the occasion of leaving the Schoolhouse Chapel, Adin Ballou wrote a touching poem of seven stanzas whose first line reads, “Farewell, dear Schoolhouse-Chapel. Farewell to the Schoolhouse- Chapel.” The Hopedale High School opened in 1889. Pupils from the town, now independent from Milford, had been attending the Milford High School, or in some cases, the Hopedale town hall. The new school had accommodations for fifty pupils. It was the gift of the Hopedale Machine Company, George Draper and Sons, and the Dutcher Temple Company. The cost was $6,000, exclusive of land and furnishings. The school was used until the new high school was opened in 1929. The Roman Catholic Church is now located on this site and uses the remodeled building. The Dutcher Street School was opened in 1898. At that time it was called the New Grammar School. This handsome structure of red brick with granite trimmings was erected at a cost of $40,000. It has been in constant use since its building, with several useful interior alterations. Seven years later, in October 1915, the Park Street School was ready for use, having cost $37,000, with the lot valued at $1,000. This school has taken care of the first four grades, sharing this responsibility with other elementary schools. In 1928, the General Draper High School on Adin Street was ready for use, and dedicated April 6, 1929. While the building was erected by the town, the lot, formerly the site of the General Draper home, was the gift of the General’s daughter, now Madame Draper-Boncompagni. The following year, the Memorial room, containing the family library, now the High School library, was decorated and furnished by Madame Draper-Boncompagni and has been maintained by her ever since. In 1929, the Hopedale Town Report reads, “The South Hopedale one-room school has gone on in the usually harmonious and successful manner…” The pupils of the three highest grades had been attending the Dutcher Street School by bus. However, the school, whose value in 1915 was estimated at $2,000, was given up and sold for a dwelling place, and is still used as such after much remodeling. In 1932, Mrs. Frank J. Dutcher, whose husband was long a member of the School Committee, gave the lot adjoining the high school property as a memorial to Mr. Dutcher. If, at the end of fifty years the land is not needed for school purposes, it becomes a park. It is a far cry from the one-room school house built in the year 1709 at a cost of fifteen pounds to the ultra-modern Hopedale school for which the sum of $375,000 was appropriated in town meeting. But standards and values have always been of highest New England quality in Hopedale. More on the early history of Hopedale schools Town Buildings and Departments Menu Now and Then - Hopedale High School Superintendent's report, graduation program, honor roll, class photo, 1909 Home School of the Hopedale Community The General Draper Library HOME
Historical Society at the Bancroft Library, I was going through scrapbooks of newspaper clippings at the library and found that many years earlier, Rachael Day's sister-in-law, Lucy Day had written a school history also. It has many anecdotes about the early years of the schools. You can see it below. |
Community on Hopedale Street. c. 1843 |
The Chapel Street School on the corner of Chapel and Hopedale streets. |
The original Hopedale High School - Hopedale Street, 1889 |
The original Hopedale High School with addition. |
Dutcher Street School, 1898 |
Park Street School, 1914 |
General Draper High School, 1927 |
Hopedale Junior-Senior High School |
Memorial Elementary School, 1954 - Adin Street side |
Prospect Street entrance side |
The Henrietta Walker Day page on the Find a Grave site. Since the box above is a graphic, none of what appear to be links will work. However, if you use the link in the first sentence in this parpagraph, it will take you the Henrietta Walker Day page where the links to more on Lucy and other family members will work. More on the Walker family |
the first Hopedale High graduation was held. The high school wasn't built until 1889 and I don't think the Chapel Street School would have been suitable for it. My guess is that the best location in town for the graduation of 1887 would have been the Unitarian Church. The original Unitarian Church; not the present one. The present one was built in 1898.
think "Miss Draper" in the 1887 program also would have been Edith. She was the daughter of General Draper and his first wife, Lilla. Edith married Montgomery Blair, Jr, and they lived in what was then the Blair family home in Washington, D.C. now known as Blair House, or the president's guest house. If you click on Edith's name, you'll go to a page with a condensed version of the diary she kept while a student at Miss Porter's School.
history near the top of this page was, years later of course, his wife. |
Henry W B Arnold graduated from Hopedale High School in the first class, 1888, at age of 17 -- and was the only graduate. Two former members had dropped out during the year. (In June 1938 he was toastmaster at the 50th anniversary of the first graduation, a big celebration in the Community House in Hopedale.)
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