Celebrating 325 years of Quaker Education in America

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CHRONICLES OF

Quaker Education

WINTER 2014

Celebrating

325

of Quaker Education in America

Joint celebration of Quaker education with Friends Select and Penn Charter students at the Arch Street Meeting House

Friends being willing to encourage a school in this town, and in order thereto, they agreed with George Keith to assure him a certain salary of fifty pounds per year, to be paid quarterly, with house rent convenient for his school and family, with the profit of the school . . . the said George Keith also promiseth to teach the poor (which are not of ability to pay) for nothing . . .

2014

Minutes of the Monthly Meeting of Friends Philadelphia, Fifth Month 26, 1689

is a landmark year for Quaker education in America, for it was 325 years ago, in 1689, that William Penn, along with the Pennsylvania’s provisional government and the Philadelphia Friends Meeting, established the Friends’ Public School in Philadelphia. Quakers came to America as early as 1656 and meetings established a few small schools prior to 1689. We celebrate 2014 as the 325th anniversary of Quaker education in America because in 1689 the Provincial Council set up “Friends’ Public School, founded in Philadelphia at the request, cost, and charges of the People called Quakers.� William Penn Charter School and Friends Select School date their beginnings to 1689. The Overseers of the William Penn Charter today can trace their lineage back to the original Overseers named by William Penn. Friends Select School is overseen by a board of trustees appointed by Central Philadelphia Monthly Meeting and Monthly Meeting of Friends of Philadelphia at Arch Street tracing their roots back to the 1689 Friends of Philadelphia Monthly Meeting. We’ve asked William Penn Charter School and Friends Select School to write about their respective histories and how they are celebrating the 325th anniversary.

William Penn Charter School Penn Charter, established in 1689, from the beginning was different from other schools in the colonies and in the “Old World.� Penn’s school was founded not for some people but for all people. It was one of the first schools open to children of all religions and races, one of the first to educate girls and to offer financial aid. Penn saw the school as central to his ideas for a democratic society. He knew that, for the new colony to thrive, its citizens would need to have a moral education for a participatory democracy. He envisioned a new kind of education that would prepare young people to be teachers, merchants, builders, and farmers, as well as political and professional leaders. Penn’s school began in 1689 with the hiring of a headmaster and school records show that it grew quickly, eventually evolving into a network of schools.

Friends schools established in the 17th and 18th centuries: 1681 1689 1689 1697 1748 1780 1784 1784 1785 1786 1786 1788 1794 1796 1799

Rancocas Friends School, NJ William Penn Charter School, PA Friends Select School, PA Abington Friends School, PA Wilmington Friends School, DE Plymouth Meeting Friends School, PA Friends School of Baltimore, MD Moses Brown School, RI Moorestown Friends School, NJ Friends Seminary, NY Haddonfield Friends School, NJ Westfield Friends School, NJ Buckingham Friends School, PA Oakwood Friends School, NY Westtown School, PA

A Publication of the

Dr. Darryl J. Ford, Penn Charter’s current head of school, kicked off a celebration of the school’s 325th anniversary at an opening assembly for students and staff in September that featured a colloquy between him and “William Penn.� Penn Charter administrator, teacher, and Penn scholar Stephen A. Bonnie played the role of Penn and the two engaged in a lively discussion about Penn’s family, his city, his state — and his school. Penn Charter followed up with a joint celebration of Quaker education with Friends Select at Arch Street Meeting House, where the Monthly Meeting of Friends Philadelphia, established in 1684, has been Meeting for Worship since 1804. Penn Charter has planned further projects to celebrate the 325th anniversary, including: s ! MINUTE lLM ABOUT 7ILLIAM 0ENN 0RODUCED AND directed by Philip Katz, a 2001 graduate of Penn Charter, the film features interviews with prominent historians as well as reenactments. The video will be available on penncharter.com. s $IGITIZING THE SCHOOL S EXTENSIVE AND IMPORTANT ARCHIVES actively integrating the materials into curriculum and instruction; and making the materials available on penncharter.com for all to use. s 0UBLICATION OF A SMALL HISTORY OF 7ILLIAM 0ENN #HARTER 3CHOOL

Friends Select School Friends Select School traces their roots back to being a direct descendent of the Friends’ Public School, established by the Monthly Meeting of Friends Philadelphia (today, the Arch Street Meeting) in 1689. Almost 150 years later, in 1833, a Select School for Boys opened at 820 Cherry Street and a separate Select School for Girls was located on 7th Street near Race. The schools combined in 1890 to become Friends Select School and moved to one building on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. The word Select in the school name dates back to 1827, a time when Orthodox Quakers created schools to “select� and educate only Orthodox Quaker children. Friends Select School abandoned this practice in 1877 and today welcomes children from all religions, nationalities, and ethnicities. While the school’s name and location have changed through the years, much has remained constant, including the school’s connection to the founding Meeting, its commitment to Quaker testimonies and philosophy, and its location in Center City Philadelphia. Today FSS is under the care of the Monthly Meeting at Arch Street as well as the Central Philadelphia Monthly Meeting at Race Street, and the school is still very much a Center City school. Friends Select shared the 325th anniversary of Quaker education this fall in the joint celebration with William Penn Charter School. The two schools came together in the Arch Street Meetinghouse to hear former FSS teacher and professional storyteller Charlotte Blake Alston tell stories about William Penn and the founding of Quaker education. Middle school students from both schools broke into mixed groups to discuss Quakerism. And so, Friends Council on Education celebrates Quaker education, based on Quaker principles, which began and has continued to spread throughout the world over the past 325 years. Happy anniversary to all Friends schools!


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