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Leoti L. West (1851-1933) had longed for the opportunity "to be west and grow up with the country," In 1878, at the age of twenty-seven, West left her Iowa home to teach at a new school in Washington Territory. Undertaking the two-week journey alone, the young teacher arrived in a Northwest that was still very much a pioneer territory. The school that West opened was one of the first in the area and soon attracted students from all over the Northwest. By the end of West's first term, her original class of seventeen had grown to nearly one hundred students housed in a small schoolroom. In 1881…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Leoti L. West (1851-1933) had longed for the opportunity "to be west and grow up with the country," In 1878, at the age of twenty-seven, West left her Iowa home to teach at a new school in Washington Territory. Undertaking the two-week journey alone, the young teacher arrived in a Northwest that was still very much a pioneer territory. The school that West opened was one of the first in the area and soon attracted students from all over the Northwest. By the end of West's first term, her original class of seventeen had grown to nearly one hundred students housed in a small schoolroom. In 1881 the school was officially named the Colfax Academy. West taught in Washington for more than fifty years and influenced thousands of graduates. West's reminiscences first appeared in the
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Autorenporträt
Josephine Corliss Preston was the superintendent of public instruction for the state of Washington. Brenda K. Jackson is an assistant professor of history at Belmont University. She is the author of Domesticating the West: The Re-creation of the Nineteenth-Century American Middle Class (Nebraska 2005).