Dr. Kuhn taught at New Jersey State Teachers College from 1919 to 1952 and was Head of the Speech Department, Supervisor of Drama, and member of the Faculty Committee on Assembly Programs.
Head of the English Department at New Jersey State Teachers College at Trenton and member of the Faculty Committee on Assembly Programs. Taught from 1930 to 1947.
Mabel Evelyn Bray was born in Madison, New Jersey on January 3, 1878, to Edward A. Bray, a Presbyterian clergyperson who emigrated from England in the 1870s and Priscilla Sarah Haire, a concert pianist from Michigan. By 1880, the family left New Jersey and were living in Michigan where Bray spent her youth along with her younger siblings, John R. and Eugenia (later Persons).
Bray’s educational background was diverse. She graduated from the Michigan Female Seminary in 1897; studied music in Germany and Italy; and completed courses at the University of Michigan, Detroit Conservatory of Music, and programs through the New School of Methods of Public School Music in various locations.
After traveling in Europe and singing in “small-town opera houses,” she began teaching music at public schools in Moorhead, Minnesota in 1899. Later, she taught at a few other schools in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, and St. Louis, Missouri. By 1903, she was head of the Music Department at the State Normal School in Cheney, Washington. Six years later, she returned to New Jersey to teach at the Westfield Public Schools. There, she founded The Supervisors School of Music. In Westfield, she began living with fellow teacher Harriet E. Mann, until Mann’s death in 1944.
According to the September 25, 1979 issue of The Signal, Bray arrived at The New Jersey State Normal School in Trenton in 1918 “to organize and administer a new special music curriculum.” She served as head of the Music Department from 1918 until her retirement in 1948 and earned the rank of full professor in 1935. She improved music instruction throughout the state by organizing high school choral groups. Her music program at what is now The College of New Jersey extended through the 1970s. She authored several music textbooks, including the Music Hour series for teachers and students.
In 1959, she moved to the Royal Oaks Manor retirement home in Duarte, California. There, she taught music appreciation classes to the other residents for fourteen years. She also edited the house newsletter Oak Leaves.
Trenton State College honored her in 1963 by naming the newly built music building “Bray Hall.” It was demolished in 1999 to make way for the new Social Sciences Building.
Mabel Bray died on May 27, 1979, at the age of 101, in Duarte.
Mathematics instructor and administrator at the Model School, 1900-1929. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/74001700/wandell-b-secor
Model School Latin and English instructor. FamilySearch ID: LJLG-8GW
Instructor of unknown subject, but probably classics (see the SUNY Cortland Digital Commons' 1903 commencement booklet available online), ca. 1916. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/81204358/ada-amanda-reed
Clayton Roy Brower was born in 1922 in Kingston, New York. He earned a Bachelor's and Master's degrees from Syracuse University, served in the army, and later earned a Doctorate from Columbia University. He began teaching in 1948 in Pulaski, New York, was the assistant superintendent of Plainfield Public Schools in 1955, then became professor and Chair of the Education Department at Trenton State College in 1962. In 1970, he became Interim chief executive, then president from 1971 to 1979. He died at the age of 99 on June 30, 2022.
Principal of the New Jersey State Normal School, Trenton, and supervising principal of the Model School, from ca. 1890 to ca. 1901. Faculty advisor for the Thencanic Society, and the recipient of a number of honors from its members. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/190030178/oliver-c-mordorf
Model School student and Thencanic Society member, ca. 1898. Princeton University Class of 1903. Instructor in the History of Education and later in English for the State Normal School/State Teachers College. Grandson of iron industrialist and state politician Charles Hewitt and great-nephew of iron industrialist and U.S Congressman/New York Mayor Abram Hewitt. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/45568782/charles_conrad_hewitt; FamilySearch ID L51C-4QP
Normal School teacher. https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/59352370/eleanor-b-parmenter