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Setting a Standard for Suburbia: Innovation in the Scarsdale Schools, 1920–1930
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 February 2017
Extract
During the 1920s the flight to the suburbs received wide attention in the popular press. Magazines carried articles with such titles as “The World's Greatest Migration,” “Why I Live in a Suburb,” and “The City's Diminishing Returns.” Actually suburbanization was not a new phenomenon. For example, since the 1840s the population of New York City's periphery had been growing at a faster rate than the city's core. But while the process of migration to the suburbs was not new, the civic pride and sense of independence of many suburbanites was. Armed with the progressive idea of positive government and determined to halt any further attempts by the city to expand, suburbanites, particularly of the upper-middle class, built communities that would serve as islands of exclusivity within the greater metropolis.
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1. Cleef, Eugene Van, “The World's Greatest Migration,” American City, 39 (Sept., 1928): 154–155; Butler, Ellis Parker, “Why I live in a Suburb,” American Magazine, 103 (March, 1927): 50–51, 212, 214 and 216; “The City's Diminishing Returns,” Independent, 114 (May 2, 1925): 448.Google Scholar
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7. This analysis is based on information in the New York State Census, Manuscript for Scarsdale, 1905, 1915 and 1925, available at the Westchester County Clerk's Office in White Plains, New York and through the Genealogical Society of the Mormon Church (microfilm reels 589,664; 589,671 and 589,904). In determining whether a head of household belonged to the upper-middle class, I relied mainly on the listing of his, or occasionally her, occupation. In cases where this designation seemed vague, I considered whether the household included live-in servants and occasionally, as a last resort, the social status of people living in the immediate neighborhood.Google Scholar
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41. Bd. of Ed., III (Feb. 23, 1925), p. 69.Google Scholar
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54. Editorial, SI (May 3, 1924): 4.Google Scholar
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57. Bd. of Ed., III (Nov. 28, 1924), p. 36.Google Scholar
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60. Underhill quoted in editorial, “What the Scarsdale Plan Really Is,” SI (April 27, 1928): 4.Google Scholar
61. SI (Mar. 14, 1925): 1 and 2.Google Scholar
62. “The Experience of Scarsdale,” SI (May 8, 1931): 4 and 20. Bd. of Ed., III (Dec. 22, 1924), pp. 46–47 and (Jan. 26, 1925), p. 54.Google Scholar
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64. SI (Dec. 16, 1927): 4.Google Scholar
65. Bd. of Ed., IV (June 25, 1928), p. 112 and School Report, 1929, pp. 17–18.Google Scholar
66. School Report, 1930, p. 13.Google Scholar
67. School Report, 1929, pp. 17–18. Statistics cited in two articles by Underhill, , “The Scarsdale Plan,” Junior-Senior H. S. Clearing House, 5 (October 1930): 118 and “The Experience of Scarsdale, SI (May 8, 1931): 4.Google Scholar
68. Bd. of Ed., V (April 27, 1931), p. 245.Google Scholar
69. “The Scarsdale Plan,” Clearing House: 118.Google Scholar
70. In 1919–1920 the board of education budgeted a total of $110,440.00 for 625 students or $176.71 per student. In 1929–1930 the board budgeted $560,051.39 for 1,766 students or $317.13 per student. School Report, 1919, p. 8 and 1929, p. 7.Google Scholar
71. School Report, 1920, p. 4 and 1930, pp. 3–4.Google Scholar
72. In 1928 Scarsdale paid an average salary of $2,275.74 compared to Bronxville $3,090.71; Mount Vernon $2,833.87; New Rochelle $2,678.18; White Plains $2,594.00; Pelham $2,421.40 and Mamaroneck $2,329.74. Bd. of Ed., IV, (Apr. 23, 1928), p. 88.Google Scholar
73. One indication of a strong educational program is the number of semi-finalists a school has in the National Merit Scholarship competition. The five communities mentioned, along with Scarsdale, ranked among the top 25 schools in terms of National Merit semifinalists from 1975 to 1978. Exeter: Bulletin of Phillips Exeter Academy, 78 (Nov. 1978): 12–13.Google Scholar
74. Gans, Herbert J., The Levittowners: Ways of Life and Politics in a New Suburban Community, (New York, 1967), p. 88.Google Scholar
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