The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 132 pages of information about The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 3.

The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 3 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 132 pages of information about The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 3.
remained until 1758.  There are now twenty-six different school-houses, including the High School, a large effective building, situated on Walnut street.  Further accommodations at the present time are greatly needed, the existing houses being overcrowded.  The amount last appropriated for the schools was $184,500 for maintenance, and $20,000 for the purchase of free textbooks.  Beside the public schools there are several large and well-known educational institutions,—­the College of the Holy Cross, the Free Institute, the Worcester Academy, the Highland Military Academy, the Oread Institute, the State Normal School, and the Roman Catholic Parochial schools.  There are also several private schools of note.  The educational interests of the city have kept pace with its rapid and astonishing growth.

[Illustration:  Old Paine Homestead, Lincoln street.]

Worcester has seven national banks, four savings-banks, and one safety deposit and trust company.

Among a number of newspapers the chief ones have been the “Spy” and “Evening Gazette.”  The “Massachusetts Spy” is one of the oldest papers in this country, and has been published with unbroken numbers for 115 years.  It was established in Boston, in July, 1770, but was removed to Worcester by its proprietor, Isaiah Thomas, in May, 1775.  It was in those days outspoken with regard to the difficulties between the mother country and the colonies, and, owing to its urgent appeals for freedom from tyranny, it became necessary to remove press and paper.  Mr. Thomas was certainly one of the most remarkable men of his day.  His patriotism never waned during the most trying days of the Revolution, and the “Massachusetts Spy” and its editor are a part of the history of the country.  July 22, 1845, the “Daily Spy” was first issued.  The first number was on a sheet 18 by 23 inches, a trifle larger than the first number of the “Massachusetts Spy,” which was 16 by 20 inches.  It has been enlarged several times.  The “National AEgis,” published in 1801, in 1833 merged into the “Massachusetts Yeoman,” a paper started in 1823.  The name was changed to the “Worcester Palladium.”  In 1829 the “Worcester County Republican” was started, and also merged into the “Palladium,” in 1834.  It was a successful paper for years, but in 1876 it was sold to the “Spy.”  The “Gazette,” begun in 1801 as a weekly, became a daily in 1843, and is now an eight-page paper, the only one in the city.  In 1851 the “Daily Morning Transcript” was issued.  Early in 1866 its name was changed to the “Evening Gazette,” and it is now the representative afternoon sheet of the city.  There are two able and well-conducted French weekly journals,—­“Le Travailleur,” and “Le Courier de Worcester.”

[Illustration:  High school building.]

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The Bay State Monthly, Volume 3, No. 3 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.