Calvin Coolidge Appoints Trustee of the National Training School for Girls
CALVIN COOLIDGE
From Seth Kaller Inc., White Plains, NY, U.S.A.
Seller rating 2 out of 5 stars
AbeBooks Seller since 1 December 2005
From Seth Kaller Inc., White Plains, NY, U.S.A.
Seller rating 2 out of 5 stars
AbeBooks Seller since 1 December 2005
About this Item
Partially Printed Document Signed, April 18, 1925, Washington, DC. Appointment of Mrs. Otto L. Veerhoff as Trustee of the National Training School for Girls. Countersigned by U.S. Attorney General John G. Sargent (1860-1939); includes a Department of Justice red embossed seal. 1 p., 10 1/2 x 16 in. President Calvin Coolidge reappoints Amy Louise Veerhoff as a member of the Board of Trustees of the National Training School for Girls. Originally appointed by President Warren G. Harding, Veerhoff served as president of the Board of Trustees for several years. Historical BackgroundIn 1888, Congress created the Reform School for Girls of the District of Columbia, and the name was changed to the National Training School for Girls in 1912. It was overseen by the Department of Justice and funded by Congressional appropriations. A six-member Board of Trustees oversaw the institution. In 1922-1923, Amy Louise Veerhoff served as president of the Board, consisting of two men and four women.The National Training School for Girls accepted both white and black inmates, including unwed mothers. Congress considered the school to be a correctional facility rather than a charity, because of its mission to rehabilitate "wayward" girls.President Veerhoff stated in a report submitted to the Board of Charities of the District of Columbia in 1923 that "the number of girls in the school June 30, 1923, was 56. During the year 40 were admitted, 39 reinstated, 16 discharged, 62 paroled, 50 escaped, and 1 died while on parole. The average daily number in the school was 60; the highest number at any one time being 106, the lowest, 49." She also reported that at present there were at the school "four colored babies with their mothers. Formerly the practice has been to take the child from the mother upon her return to the school, thus relieving her of all further responsibility and knowledge of the child. This custom we have discontinued, believing that the child kept with the mother is the greatest means for the social reinstatement of the mother." The Board asked for $10,000 in 1925 for repairs and remodeling, including a plan to rewire Washington Cottage, "which has already been declared dangerous" and providing "an automatic system for the release of all bedroom doors in case of fire, which has been recommended for years as a grave necessity." She also reported that Superintendent Mrs. Morse had resigned to accept a position in New York at thrice the salary and that Miss Altona F. Gales from Boston had accepted the post of superintendent.[1]In 1936, Carrie Weaver Smith became the new superintendent of the National Training School for Girls. When she arrived, she was horrified to find a decrepit facility operated with cruelty and filled with mostly African American inmates. Her tenure lasted only twenty months, in which she enacted a broad system of reforms, and enlisted the aid of First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt. When Smith invited members of Congress to visit, they demanded reforms. In 1936 and 1937, the Works Progress Administration conducted extensive renovations of the five buildings at the National Training School for Girls. However, two outbreaks of racial violence among girls at the school led the District of Columbia Board of Public Welfare to fire Smith. Despite hearings on her tenure in May and June 1939, the Board upheld her dismissal and returned to earlier punitive policies. Black girls at the National Training School continued to receive poor education in decaying buildings until the facility was finally closed in 1953.Calvin Coolidge (1872-1933) was born in Vermont and graduated from Amherst College in 1895. An attorney by profession, Coolidge served in the state House of Representatives as a Republican from 1907 to 1908, then in the Massachusetts Senate from 1912-1915, the latter year as its president. From 1916 to the beginning of 1919, he served as lieutenant governor under Governor Samuel W. McCall. (See website for full description). Seller Inventory # 26525
Bibliographic Details
Title: Calvin Coolidge Appoints Trustee of the ...
Publisher: Washington, D.C.
Publication Date: 1925
Binding: No binding
Condition: Fine
Book Type: Part. Printed Document Signed
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