History and Comprehensive Description of Loudoun County, Virginia by James William Head
page 134 of 250 (53%)
page 134 of 250 (53%)
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Few schools were taught by women in Colonial times and female teachers
were still rare until a comparatively recent period. The salaries of regularly appointed tutors varied according to the nature of the schools and the ability of the district to meet the expense. After the Revolution, with increasing prosperity, came a spirit of general improvement and a new interest in the cause of education. The present condition of education in Loudoun is hopeful, public instruction being now popular with all classes. Intelligence is more generally diffused than at any previous period of the County's history, and happily, the progress of moral education has, on the whole, fully kept pace with intellectual culture. Our boys and girls are reared in a home atmosphere of purity, of active thought, and intelligent cultivation; all their powers are keenly stimulated by local and national prosperity and unrestricted freedom in all honest endeavor. With the improvement in the school system has come a better style of school-houses. The "little red school-house on the hill" has given place to buildings of tasteful architecture, with modern improvements conducive to the comfort and health of the scholars, and the refining influences of neat surroundings is beginning to be understood. Separate schools are maintained for colored pupils and graded schools sustained at populous places. With free schools, able teachers consecrated to their calling, and fair courses of instruction; with a people generous in expenditures |
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