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Wright, Walstein Fuller

Zerrahn, Carl Gustave.

THIRD CLASS.

Abell, Edmund
Adams, Charles Jesse
Adams, George Lincoln
Alger, Arthur Martineau
Allen, Louis Albert
Almy, Henry Niles
Anderson, Luther Stetson
Andrews, William Turel
Armstrong, George Ernest
Babcock, John Brazer, jr.
Babcock, Wilber Chester
Baker, Charles Morrill
Baldwin, Harry Heath
Barker, Samuel Knox
Barron, Clarence Walker
Barry, Thomas Jackson
Bartlett, Charles Gassett
Bartley, Wm. Henry
Beeching, Geo. Washington
Beeching, William Henry
Bencker, William Peter
Bendix, Louis

Berry, Rufus Lecompte
Blanchard, Charles Hazen
Bodwell, Charles Thomas
Bonn, Evelyn Louis Marcus
Bradford, William Burroughs
Brewer, Frank Crocker
Briggs, Merriam Parker

Brown, Charles Rogers

Brown, Frederic W.
Brown, George Frank
Brown, Samuel Edward
Bryant, Cushing Mitchell
Burns, John Franklin
Burrows, Charles Warren
Cahill, Edward

Calkins, Charles Wesley, jr.
Calkins, Frederic Walter
Carew, Joseph Francis
Carter, Clarence Howard
Casco, William Henry Appleton

Cass, Louis Baxter

Caton, William Jordan

Church, Clifton

Clapp, John Bouvé
Clark, John Henry
Clark, Oliver Tremain
Cobb, Albert Winslow
Cochran, Maurice Greene
Coleman, James Clarence
Conant, Edgar Augustus
Connery, John Francis
Copeland, Charles Gilman
Cowing, Frank William
Cushing, Livingstone
Daley, Charles Dennis
Daly, James Washington H.
Davis, Edward Herbert
Dean, Walter Lofthouse
Dobinson, William Joseph
Dodd, Arthur Hooper
Dolbeare, Charles Mitchell
Dorgan, William Joseph
Drew, Charles Fuller
Dunbar, Willis Hayden
Duncan, Charles Isaac
Edwards, Charles Robbins
Eldridge, Foxhall Parker
Emerson, Frederick Winslow
Emerson, Henry Lawrence
Emery, James William
English, William Townsend
Esterbrook, Charles Eugene
Everett, Charles

Farrar, Granville Robinson
Farwell, Herbert Gleason

Faxon, Edward Pope

Fenno, Henry

Fishel, Jacob Louis

Fitzgerald, Charles Albert
Flynn, George Wm. Franklin
Flynn, William Patrick
French, Wilfred August
Frenzel, Arthur

Gage, Frederic Sargent
Gallagher, George Henry
German, James Albert

Gilson, Alfred Henry

Gleason, Frederic Amerson

Glover, Lyman Stayner

Goodale, Henry Delano

Gookin, Harry Monroe
Gorman, Charles Frederic
Gourley, John, jr.
Gowen, Caleb Emery
Graves, Edward Milton
Gray, Allen Frank
Greene, Frank Eugene
Griffin, Daniel John
Hadfield, James
Haines, Charles Albert
Hall, William Herbert

Hallet, Benjamin Franklin, jr.
Hamblen, Arthur Wellington
Hawes, Edward Hall
Hearn, Joseph Francis
Hebard, Frederic Condon
Hewes, Joseph Richard
Hilliard, Richard Walter
Higgins, John T.

Hodges, Frank Appleton
Hoffert, Joseph Jacob
Holbrook, William Francis
Honey, Edwin Alonzo
Hosley, Frank Sylvester
Hunneman, George Hewes
Hunting, George Stanley
Hurst, John Archinson
James, Frank Everett

Jordan, George Edwin

Joyce, Michael William
Keach, Charles Henry
Keenan, Thomas Henry
Keith, George Warren
Kelly, Henry F.
Kelly, Thomas Francis
King, Charles

Kirmes, Victor Christopher
Knight, Levi Hamlin
Knights, Francis Hiram
Langell, Everard Irwin
Lavender, John Adams
Leach, George Stutson

Levi, Louis

Lewis, William Albert
Lincoln, David Pratt
Lincoln, Frederic Walker
Loring, Harry Parkman
Lovis, Andrew Morgan
Lynch, John Bernard
Lynch, Patrick Joseph
Manson, Frederick Tower
Marshall, Melville Tilden
Mather, William Herbert
McAloon, Antoine Andrew
McCool, Robert John
McDermott, Thomas Henry
McDonald, Frederic Alexander
McGail, James

McGill James Francis
McGrath, John Henry
McKenna, Frank Charles

McKenny, Charles Francis
McLaughlin, Francis Patrick
McManus, Thomas Francis Jos.
McNeil, John Balkam
Menard, John Alvine

Miller, Robert James
Milton, Albert Gookin
Morey, Warren Woodbury
Moriarty, Edward Joseph
Morris, John Joseph
Morris, John Mason
Mulchinock, John Dennis
Murphy, John Charles
Neill, William Henry
Neilon, William Thomas
Noble, Frank Charlton
O'Gorman, James F.
O'Reilly, Bernard Joseph
O'Reilly, John James
Palmer, Benjamin Sanborn
Parks, George Richmond
Parsons, Edward Jenness
Patterson, John Richard
Peabody, Charles Everett
Perkins, Seth, jr.
Phillips, Joseph Alfred
Pierce, Eugene David

Pierce, Lubin Elma

Porter, Asa Herbert

Porter, Lewis Bates

Porter, John Allison

Pratt, Fred. William

Pratt Thomas L.

Prentiss, Frederic Herbert

Preston, Thomas Webb

Priest, William Francis

Prince, George Thomas Raymond, Franklin Freeborn Read, Arthur Harold Reddy, Robert Franklin Richardson, Charles Edward Ripley, Edward Franklin Robbins, Eugene Thomas Robinson, Arthur Burton Roskell, George James Roulston, Thomas William Safford, George Howard Sargent, Charles William Sargent, Richard Turner Saunders, Frank Dexter Scannell, Ambrose Sears, Albert Russell Seccomb, Eben Dennis Shattuck, Sidney Doane Shaw, Walter H. Shea, Daniel Joseph Simonds, Frank Phinney Smith, George Henry Spicer, Vibe Clay Stephenson, Walter Bryant Somes, Charles Frank Stewart, Charles Edward Stinson, Theodore Fiske

Sullivan, Michael John

Summerfield, Edward
Sutherland, Arthur Charles
Talbot, Edward Lowell
Tavener, Clarence Augustus
Taylor, George Albert
Tufts, Harry Payne

Turner, Frederic William, jr.
Twomey, Dennis J.
Underwood, Arthur Roswell
Upham, Harry Thomas
Vose, Edward Webster
Wadley, George Frederic
Walsh, Walter Joseph
Warner, Albert Eri
Warner, Frank Upton
Watson, John Henry
Webb, Henry Edgecombe
Webster, Edward Sheldon
Whalen, Stephen Francis
Whealen, Thomas Francis
Wheeler, Albert James
Wheeler, Frederic Loring
Whitmarsh, Charles Alfred
Wilkes, Everett Dyer
Willard, Charles Sumner
Willis, Charles Orsmer
Witherell, Julian Franklin
Woodward, Charles Chase
Wyman, Horace Albert
Young, Charles Harvey.

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Stutson, Thomas Edwin Sullivan, Eugene Francis Sullivan, Louis Henry

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GIRLS' HIGH AND NORMAL SCHOOL.

THE Committee on the Girls' High and Normal School respectfully present their Annual Report.

The whole number of teachers in the two departments during the year ending August 31st, 1870, was twenty-six. The increase in the number of pupils in September, 1869, entitled the school to three additional assistants, and Miss Lucy O. Fessenden, Miss Julia A. Jellison, and Miss Adeline S. Tufts were appointed. The head-master, head-assistant, thirteen assistants, and the teachers of French, German, drawing and music, have been employed in the Mason-street building. The training class has been under the charge of Miss Stickney, and her assistant, Miss Stetson. The primary schools have been taught by their regular teachers and by the pupils in the normal department. Professor Monroe has continued his valuable lessons in vocal and physical culture, and Professor Mason is the instructor in vocal music in the primary schools. The number of different scholars registered was four hundred and ninetytwo; one hundred and seventy-four of whom were received from the public grammar schools of this city. Two hundred and nineteen have been discharged. The largest number present at any one time was four hundred and fifty-nine; the largest

average attendance for any one month was four hundred and fifty-nine, in September; and the average attendance for the year, four hundred and thirty-one. Sixty-one young ladies received diplomas of graduation. Their names are given in the appendix.

The year that has just closed terminates the connection of the school with the old buildings in Mason street, which are associated in the minds of the graduates with many happy hours. In 1852, when this institution was founded, the second and third floors of the old Adams school-house, since known as the North building, accommodated its hundred pupils. In 1857 one hundred and four candidates were examined, and ninety-one admitted, and there were one hundred and seventy-four pupils under the charge of ten instructors, the master, head-assistant, five assistants, and teachers of drawing, French, and vocal music. The removal of the Public Library in that year from the lower floor, gave the additional room required by the growth of the school. number of pupils increased to two hundred and sixty-seven in 1859, and to two hundred and ninetyfive in 1860. In 1861 the adjacent building, once known as the Medical College, and afterwards occupied by the Society of Natural History, was bought by the city, adapted by judicious alterations to the use of the school, and connected by a corridor with the north building. The increase of the school in the next three years demanded additional accommodations; while the erection of lofty buildings for business purposes in the immediate neighborhood

The

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