Records of School District #9, Fractional, Orange and Sebewa townships, Ionia County, 1870-1921.

ArchivalResource

Records of School District #9, Fractional, Orange and Sebewa townships, Ionia County, 1870-1921.

Record group 63-4 consists of records of Fractional School District No. 9, Orange and Sebewa townships, Ionia County, Michigan, for the years 1870-1921. Includes minutes of annual school meetings (1870-1912) and the following publications: List of textbooks and prices (1920); Explanations of school laws of Michigan (1917); Revised list of books and prices (1917); School officers of Michigan (1905); Method of consolidating school districts under present laws in Michigan ([1904]); Amendments to the school laws, 1887; Course of study and daily programme for country schools for the use of teachers and school officers ([1889?]); How to take the school census (1912); First supplementary list of books and prices (1914); Prospectus of Michigan Young People's Reading Circle, 1911-1912; School directors of Ionia County (1915-19); List of qualified teachers and school officers : directory and statistics of Ionia County, Michigan, 1919-1920; List of Ionia County teachers (1909); Directory and list of Ionia County teachers (1911, 1913, 1915-21).

1 mss. box (.5 cu. ft.)

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7752276

State Archive of Michigan

Related Entities

There are 4 Entities related to this resource.

Michigan.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6gr7pn6 (corporateBody)

Michigan Young People's Reading Circle.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w67m6v8d (corporateBody)

Ionia County (Mich.). Fractional School District No. 9.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6dg3b7s (corporateBody)

Bailey, L. H. (Liberty Hyde), 1858-1954.

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w61n81kr (person)

Liberty Hyde Bailey was instrumental in separating Horticulture from Botany and establishing it as a distinct scientific pursuit. Born on a farm in Michigan in 1858, Liberty Hyde Bailey graduated from the Michigan Agricultural College with a degree in botany. After working with the renowned botanist Asa Gray at Harvard, he returned to Michigan to teach horticulture and landscape gardening. In 1888, he came to Cornell to build a new curriculum in practical and experimental horticulture. In 1904, ...