| Samuel Sidwell Randall - 1844 - 348 lapas
...evident that the general establishment and liberal endowment of academies are highly to be commended, and are attended with the most beneficial consequences,...confined to the children of the opulent, and that a great proportion of the community is exclude.! from their immediate advantages. The establishment of common... | |
| Samuel Sidwell Randall - 1844 - 336 lapas
...denied that they are principally confined to the children of the opulent, and that a great proportion of the community is excluded from their immediate...calculated to remedy this inconvenience, and will therefore engage your early and decided consideration." On the 9th of April, 1795, the " Act for the encouragement... | |
| New York (State). Department of Public Instruction, Samuel Sidwell Randall - 1851 - 432 lapas
...evident that the general establishment and liberal endowment of academies are highly to be commended, and are attended with the most beneficial consequences,...calculated to remedy this inconvenience, and will therefore engage your early and decided consideration." On the llth of January, the Assembly appointed a committee... | |
| Samuel Sidwell Randall - 1851 - 418 lapas
...the session of the legislature in 1795, Gov. Clinton thus « again alluded to the subject : iy H excluded from their immediate advantages. The establishment...calculated to remedy this inconvenience, and will therefore engage your early and decided consideration." On the 11th of January, the Assembly appointed a committee... | |
| Samuel Sidwell Randall - 1851 - 416 lapas
...evident that the general establishment and liberal endowment of academies are highly to be commended, and are attended with the most beneficial consequences,...yet it cannot be denied that they are principally con- ,:__ fined to the children of the opulent, and that a great portion of the community is excluded... | |
| New York (State). Constitutional Convention, Franklin Benjamin Hough - 1867 - 496 lapas
...evident that the general establishment and liberal endowment of academies are highly to be commended, and are attended with the most beneficial consequences,...confined to the children of the opulent, and that a great proportion of the community is excluded from their immediate advantages. The establishment of common... | |
| New York (State). Constitutional Convention, Franklin Benjamin Hough - 1867 - 502 lapas
...denied that they are principally confined to the children of the opulent, and that a great proportion of the community is excluded from their immediate...throughout the State is happily calculated to remedy this inconvenince, and will therefore re-engage your early and decided consideration." In pursuance of this... | |
| New York (State). Dept. of Public Instruction - 1867 - 276 lapas
...are highly to be commended, and are attended with the most beneficial consequences, yet it cannot he denied that they are principally confined to the children of the opulent, and that a great proportion of the community is excluded from their immediate advantages. The establishment of common... | |
| Thomas Boese, New York (N.Y.). Board of Education - 1869 - 270 lapas
...academies are highly to be commended, and are attended by the most beneficial consequences, yet it can not be denied that they are principally confined to the children of the opulent, and that a great proportion of the community is excluded from their immediate advantages. The establishment of Common... | |
| United States. Bureau of Education - 1895 - 1082 lapas
...that they are principally confined- to the children of tho opulent, and that a great portion of tho community is excluded from their immediate advantages. The establishment of common schools through the State is happily calculated to remedy this inconvenience and will therefore engage your... | |
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