Henry Kiddle

Henry Kiddle (15 January 1824 Bath, England - 1891) was a United States educator and had an interest in spiritualism.

Biography

He came as a boy to New York City where he studied under private tutors and at the normal school. In 1843, he was made principal of a ward school, but two years later resigned to take charge of one connected with the Leake and Watts Children's Home. He was principal of a grammar school 1846-1856. He was then appointed deputy superintendent of common schools in New York City. He was made superintendent in 1870, but resigned in 1879, owing to an adverse public sentiment created by his avowal of a belief in spiritualism.

Mr. Kiddle received the degree of A. M. from Union College in 1848, and that of “officier d'académie” from the University of France in 1878. He has published in pamphlet form various addresses on education, modern spiritualism, and religious topics. He edited several revisions of Goold Brown's English Grammar (last ed., New York, 1882) and other school text books, including a Text-Book of Physics (1883), and wrote A Manual of Astronomy and the Use of the Globes (1882), New Elementary Astronomy (1868), Cyclopædia of Education (1877) with Alexander J. Schem, Year Books of Education, 1878-1879, and Spiritual Communications (1879).

Notes

    gollark: Not all food, just bread and pasta - carbohydratey things I guess.
    gollark: Here we seem to be lacking food *and* toilet paper!
    gollark: The reaction certainly doesn't *help*, though.
    gollark: It's not *just* that.
    gollark: I don't think people will react very well to being told to basically not have any social interaction for large parts of a year, honestly.

    References

    • http://name.umdl.umich.edu/AFL7956.0001.001
    • This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). "Kiddle, Henry" . Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
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