Putnam Hall School

Putnam Hall School (opened for pupils Sept 1871; closed 1940) is a bygone notable nonsectarian boarding school for girls formerly located in Poughkeepsie, New York.

Predecessor school, Brooks Seminary
Putnam Hall was the successor to an earlier nonsectarian girls boarding school on the same property. It was named Brooks Seminary for Young Ladies. Brooks Seminary was founded September 1871 not long after the opening of Vassar College. Mary Bryan Johnson (maiden) was its founder. She and her future husband, Edward White, erected a building on six acres of elevated grounds in the southeastern section of Pougkeepsie at the corner of what then was Southeast and Hanscom Avenues. Due to competition from Vassar Preparatory School, Brooks Seminary moved to 11 Montague Terrace, Brooklyn, New York, around 1880. The last news article of a Brooks Seminary commencement was June 11, 1881 New York Herald-Tribune.
Putnam Hall School
After an interval of use as a hotel and Vassar dormitory, the Poughkeepsie building and property again launched as a new girls' boarding school in about 1901 under the name of Putnam Hall.[1]
Bartlett Park
Miss Ellen Clizbe Bartlett, who presided as proprietor and principal of Putnam Hall when it closed in 1940, donated the six acres to the city of Poughkeepsie. It is now a city park, known as Bartlett Park.

Founders

Founders of Brooks Seminary

Edward White (b. 14 Nov. 1844, Poughkeepsie; d 12 April 1914, Poughkeepsie) married Mary Bryan Johnson July 30, 1872. Mary founded Brooks Seminary before Vassar College was founded. She later rented her school to that institution and the building that was then Brooks Seminary became Putnam Hall. She died July 3, 1925, at the home of her daughter, Mary Elizabeth White Miller (Mrs. C. O. Miller), at Stamford, Connecticut. Edward White was a banker and trustee. He was assistant cashier of the Chase National Bank of New York for three years and treasurer of the Erie R. R. fourteen years.

Founders of Putnam Hall School

Miss Ellen Clizbe Bartlett (A.B., Elmira College) (1864–1944), principal since 1905 and connected with the school since 1901 became the proprietor of Putnam Hall School

Former directors and leadership

Directors and leadership of Brooks Seminary

Directors and leadership of Putnam Hall School

Alumni

Brooks Seminary Alumni

Putnam Hall Alumni

References

  1. Edmund Platt, The Eagle's History of Poughkeepsie from Earliest Settlements 1683 to 1905
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