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After serving as headmaster of headmaster of Spencer's School, Newcastle, Anderson emigrated to the Colony of Queensland in 1862 to accept a position on its board of education. [1] He became the first district inspector of schools in September 1863, senior inspector in June 1869, acting general inspector in September 1874, general inspector in ...
Director-General of Education 1876–1878 Later he became the editor (and later sole owner) of the Peak Downs Telegram. [2] He later moved to Orange, New South Wales where he operated a brewery. Graham died on 18 March 1886 in Albany, Western Australia, Australia. [3]
The Watkin Committee (chaired by Herbert Georg Watkin, Director-General of Education) also recommended that this extension in the years of compulsory schooling should be coupled with a reduction in the age of transfer from primary to secondary school and the provision of new secondary curricula.
Johnson Hagood (1847) S.C. State Comptroller 1876–80, Governor of South Carolina 1880–82. CSA Brigadier General; Hugh S. Thompson (1856) S.C. Superintendent of Education 1876–82, Governor of South Carolina 1882–86, Assistant U.S. Treasury Secretary 1886–89, U.S. Civil Service Commissioner 1889–92. Thompson Hall is named for him.
Born in Tokyo on 28 November 1876, the son of Baron Matsuoka Yasutake, Kinpei graduated from Tokyo Imperial University, Department of Political Science in 1900. [1] Commissioned by the Ministry of Education in 1902 he became an assistant professor at Imperial University in 1903. As an associate professor, he studies economics abroad in Europe ...
Edward Penfield poster promoting the Bureau of Education's United States School Garden Army (1918). The Office of Education, at times known as the Department of Education and the Bureau of Education, was a small unit in the Federal Government of the United States within the U.S. Department of the Interior from 1867 to 1972.
A manuscript of his "Plan of the Campaign of 1876" shows the level of detail and attention he gave to this project. [1] In the summer of 1876, Matthew Calbraith Butler wrote to his former commander, Wade Hampton III, urging him to seek the governorship in the upcoming election. Butler omitted the details of the violent campaign planned by Gary ...
The son of General Richard J. Stotherd (1796–1879), colonel commandant Royal Engineers, by his first wife, Elizabeth Sydney (died 1853), daughter of Hugh Boyle, of Dungiven, County Londonderry, he was born at Angler Castle, County Tyrone, on 25 November 1828.