LB I* ft 1 4* ,5)L ,- o; H ■ •A ' 1 1 1 1 ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ i i ■ ' . m m toft4-' : :4 s - <*;■>' Class__U-J6 \-SL^ 7 Book_i_A-^=^- — Copyright N° COPYRIGHT DEPOSIT. Rev. CHARLES BROOKS (1795-1872), Pastor of Third Parish, Hingham. Painting by Frothingham, 1825, in possession of the Medford Historical Society. CHARLES BROOKS And His Work for Normal Schools BY JOHN ALBREE Read before the Medford Historical Society May fifth, igo6 Press of J. C. Miller, Jr. Medford, Mass. 1907 LIBRARY of CONGRESS Two Conies Received apn iy 1907 ipyrjeht Entry cuss CL * Xc -< No ' *epvneM L— COPY B. Copyright, 1907 By JOHN ALBREE A WORD seems needed to justify printing a paper relating to a work which was completed seventy years ago. Charles Brooks himself showed a singular reticence about his labors, the reason for which has not clearly appeared.* Consequently, among his Medford friends and neighbors, Brooks' part in the educational revival was not understood, and with the lapse of time such ideas as did exist, became vague. To set forth the facts therefore this paper was prepared and read before a company of Medford people, some of whom as children had known Mr. Brooks, and on their request it is now submitted to a wider circle. JOHN ALBREE. Swampscott, Massachusetts, January i, 1907. * Brooks' Medford, p. 285. REPRINTED FROM THE "HISTORICAL REGISTER," VOL. X. No. 1, JANUARY. 1907. PUBLISHED BY THE MEDFORD HISTORICAL SOCIETY CHARLES BROOKS and his Work for Normal Schools By way of prelude let me ask if the traditions will be violated if a text is chosen, especially if it is agreed that the text will not again be referred to ? This is necessary by reason of the comments that have been made by some on learning that a paper was in prepa- ration on " Charles Brooks and His Work for Normal Schools." These comments, more or less diplomatic and guarded, have been to the effect that the name of Horace Mann ought to appear in the title. The text is " One star differeth from another star in glory." ON a summer afternoon, how many years ago is not material, a baby was a member of a little party that called at the home of the Brooks family in Medford, a home that by reason of its furnishings and surround- ings was entitled to be called the Brooks Mansion. Nothing could have been further from the minds of that household than that in the future that baby, when grown to manhood, was to stand before a Medford audience of Medford people and submit for consideration a paper on their " Brother Charles," for that was the way he was always addressed, in the delightfully formal manner characteristic of their home life. Furthermore, that in such a paper it would be assumed at the out- set that neither Charles Brooks nor his work would then be known in Medford, their Medford, and that the time would then have arrived when they, both brothers and sisters, would well nigh have passed from the memory of living men. At times it seems to have come over Charles Brooks that perhaps his three years of hard, though ultimately successful work might not have secured a firm place in G CHARLES BROOKS AND NORMAL SCHOOLS history. In 1845, we ^ n d that in a letter giving an account of his labors he tried to forecast the future. He indulged in a little fancy and said, "Some educa- tional antiquary, in his pardonable weakness, may show my lectures fifty years hence as they sometimes show old cannon."* And tonight the thought of sixty years ago becomes a fact. While perhaps the title of " educa- tional antiquary " hardly applies to your essayist, it will be assumed and the results of the delving recounted. Fortunately a valuable clew to the situation was found, and through the thoughtfulness of Mrs. Sarah Warner Brooks important, original material, a scrap-book, of Brooks' was found. Without this book, so carefully prepared, this paper must have been based on evidence at second hand and of doubtful authenticity. As it is, we are able to hear Charles Brooks' own words, and to examine cotemporary evidence in support of his statements. When the educational revival had been in progress for twenty-five years, and teachers and educators had appreciated the magnificence of the undertaking, it seemed to them to be well to hold a meeting at which the historical features might be treated. It was to this meeting that Charles Brooks was invited. The record of the meeting is most valuable, for here we find at first hand the stories of those concerned, and the particular work of each is described. The invitation Brooks received was from the com- mittee, that he attend "The Quarter Centennial Normal School Celebration at Framingham, July 1, 1864." The secretary, George N. Bigelow, added a few lines to the printed form which are suggestive. " It seems best that we should hear from your own lips some- thing of the work that you did in the establishing of Normal Schools. ... I am sorry that I was so ignorant of your great labors in this work of Normal Schools. But then, when you were so gloriously engaged, I was just entering my teens, and what should a mere boy be expected to know of what you have so long kept in silence for the sake of your children ? " •Old Colony Memorial Newspaper, Plymouth. October 4, 1845. CHARLES BROOKS AND NORMAL SCHOOLS. 7 Brooks accepted the invitation and made an address in which he reviewed his work.* This review will be considered later in its course, but it is referred to at this time because it shows that, in using the scrap-book in the compilation of this paper, we are doing what Brooks expected would be done at some time. Picture to your- selves, therefore, this slightly built, elderly man, with a winning smile and charming manner, standing before that audience over twoscore of years ago and beginning his address with these words, for they show how he felt, and they corroborate a statement in the Bigelow letter about his keeping silence: — "Mr. President: I am called to a position which I have tried to avoid. For more than a quarter of a century I have kept a pro- found silence concerning my connection with the introduction of the present system of State Normal Schools in New England, and should have kept silence to the end, had not this noble, patriotic, and Christian celebration induced some friends to tempt me to break that silence, averring it injustice to withhold the facts. " It happens that I alone possess all the historical documents, and I have used them in writing a history of one hundred and sixty-eight pages concerning the public movements in 1835 to 1S3S, not for publication, but as a legacy to my children. I have care- fully preserved in one large quarto volume all the manuscript, doc- umentary evidence, and in a folio, all the printed evidence of the facts I have stated, carefully noting dates and places. "Now can you imagine anything more ridiculous and contra- dictory than for a living man to stand up here and read his post- humous histories? Has God opened a seam in the dark cloud of the grave that he may send one ray of light to increase the full- orbed joy of this sacred occasion? " You note that he mentions three books he prepared, but of them only one, the last mentioned, has come to light. The manuscript history and the volume of man- uscript documentary evidence have eluded discovery, but the folio of the printed evidence, with dates and places carefully noted, is before you. He began the book as a " Common place Book," using *History of Missionary Agency of the State Normal Schools of Prussia in Massachusetts in 1835-6-7 and 8. Read at the Quarter Centennial Normal School Celebration in Framingham, Mas- sachusetts, July 1, 1864, by Rev. Charles Brooks, Medford. Boston Evening Transcript, July 13, 1864. Also, printed by request: not published. Boston, John Wilson & Son, 1864. 8 CHARLES BROOKS AND NORMAL SCHOOLS. it for sundry scraps and clippings. Later, some of these earlier scraps were covered with others of later date. In addition, there is the usual miscellaneous assortment of scraps having no connection with each other. What- ever he wrote that had appeared in the papers he has preserved, also, any mention of him was duly clipped and inserted. There are some family scraps, tax bills, etc. Here is a bill rendered his great great grandfather,Cochran Reeve, in 1738, for expenses on account of a slave. The items are specified as freight, nursing, and a coffin. The jail- ors's bill had not been received, so that could not be included. But for our present purpose we find many clippings which will be referred to from time to time. It is a strange sensation to study, not to glance has- tily, but to study a scrap-book, especially such a personal one as this. In our own experience we find ourselves at times perplexed as to why we preserved some clip- ping. It was probably Brooks' experience as well. And yet, after reading what he said about the " educational antiquary," one is struck with these lines, pasted just be- low his printed signature on a circular regarding the Clergyman's Aid Society. It seems as if he may have again been looking into the future. CONSOLING. You '11 be forgotten as old debts By persons who are used to borrow ; Forgotten as the sun that sets When shines a new one on the morrow. Forgotten, like the luscious peach That blessed the school boy last September ; Forgotten, like a maiden speech Which all men praise, but none remember. But later he wrote these lines, when he was in a rem- iniscent mood, and dated them 1865. And though some hopes I cherished once Died most untimely in their birth, Yet I have been beloved and blest Beyond the measure of my worth. CHARLES BROOKS (1795-1872), At Eleven Years, 1866. Silhouette by King, a