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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
February 4, 2010
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
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Thursday, February 4, 2010
Successful Appeal of Order Dividing the Union Free School District No.
1, Town of Pelham, Into Two School Districts in 1916
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In 1916, a group of Pelham taxpayers appealed an order by School
Superintendent Samuel J. Preston that divided Pelham's school district
into two districts, leaving the Village of North Pelham in a school
district by itself. The order resulted from a "lack of harmony" between
parents of high school students who attended the Siwanoy high school from
Pelham Manor and parents of those who attended the high school from North
Pelham.
Sectionalism long has been part of the history of the Town of Pelham.
This little skirmish in the war between the Village of Pelham Manor and
the Village of North Pelham is oddly reminiscent of the 19th century
political and tax-based battles between the "fishermen" of City Island in
the Town of Pelham and the "mainlanders" of Pelham Manor and Pelhamville.
With the annexation of City Island by New York City in the mid-1890s, the
"mainlanders" turned upon each other in analogous, sectional skirmishes.
The School Superintendent's order eventually was reversed. Below is a
report of the decision reversing that order.
"Education Department . . . . .
In the Matter of the Appeal from an Order Dividing UNION FREE SCHOOL
DISTRICT NO. 1, Town of Pelham, and Forming a New District out of a Part
of the Territory Thereof.
Case No. 345
(Decided December 5, 1916)
The interests of the children of the entire district are the State's first
concern and on this basis under the facts here shown the appeal herein is
sustained.
Union free school district No. 1, town of Pelham, Westchester county, as
now constituted, included that town and includes the villages of North
Pelham, Pelham and Pelham Manor. Samuel J. Preston, the district
superintendent of schools of the first supervisory district of Westchester
county, made an order to take effect April 5, 1916, dividing the district
so as to leave the village of North Pelham a district by itself.
Appellants are residents and tax payers of union free school district No.
1, town of Pelham, and appeal upon the ground that the order is against
the educational interests of the old district. There is no proof or
suggestion of proof that the children of Pelham and Pelham Manor will
receive additional opportunities by the creation of the new district. The
change also creates other disadvantages. Appeal sustained.
Harry A. Anderson, attorney for appellants.
Albert R. Palmer, attorney for respondent.
FINLEY, Commissioner.--Union free school district No. 1, town of Pelham,
Westchester county, comprises all of such town and embraces within its
limits the incorporated villages of North Pelham, Pelham and Pelham
Manor. Samuel J. Preston, district superintendent of schools of the first
supervisory district of Westchester county, executed an order, dated March
8, 1916, to take effect April 5, 1916, dividing such union free school
district and forming out of a portion of the territory thereof a new
district to be known as school district No. 2, town of Pelham. Such new
district, as so established, was to include substantially all of the
territory within the villages of Pelham and Pelham Manor, leaving the
village of North Pelham as a district by itself. The order directed that
the bonded indebtedness of the district and the value of the school
property be apportioned equitably between the two districts.
The appellants are residents and taxpayers of union free school district
No. 1, town of Pelham, four of them residing in the village of North
Pelham, two in the village of Pelham and one in the village of Pelham
Manor. Their appeal is based upon the grounds, among others, that the
order is opposed to the educational interests of the district as
constituted before such order was executed and that it discriminates
against and is unjust to the taxpayers and residents of the village of
North Pelham. Many of the residents of the villages of Pelham and Pelham
Manor are against the attempted division of the district, it being
insisted forcibly upon the argument that if a vote of all the qualified
electors of such villages were taken upon the question it would appear
that a majority were in favor of retaining the existing district. But
notwithstanding the apparent diversity of opinion among the residents of
such villages as to the advisability of a division of the district, it is
obvious that the real controversy is between the residents of such
villages who favor the establishment [Page 617 / Page 618] of a new
district and the residents of North Pelham who oppose the change.
A determination of the issues raised on the appeal necessitates a
consideration of the local situation. As has already been noted, union
free school district No. 1 comprises all the town of Pelham so that for
tax and other purposes the town is the school unit. The district lies
between the cities of Mount Vernon and New Rochelle, and borders upon the
city of New York. It is almost entirely a residential community, the
greater portion of the inhabitants having business in the city of New
York. The population of the district according to the last State census
is 4,470, of which North Pelham has 1,900, Pelham 1,090 and Pelham Manor
1,480. There are two grammar or elementary schools and a high school
maintained in the district, viz., the Hutchinson school at North Pelham,
and the Siwanoy and high school at Pelham Manor. There were 621 pupils
registered in attendance at such schools during the school year ending in
June, 1915, of which 311 attended the Hutchinson school, 224 the Siwanoy
school and 86 the high school. More than one-half of the pupils in the
high school reside in the village of North Pelham, and of the graduates
from such school during the past three years a majority were from North
Pelham. The assessed valuation of the taxable property in North Pelham is
$1,621,423, of that in Pelham, $1,819,180, and of that in Pelham Manor,
$3,371,754. By dividing the district as proposed in the order, the North
Pelham district would have a valuation of $1,621,423, while that of the
new district would have a valuation of $1,621,423, while that of the new
district would be $5,190,934.
Ordinarily the presumption would be in favor of the reasonableness and
educational propriety of an order of a district superintendent dividing a
district and establishing a new district out of the territory thereof.
The order appealed from contravenes the established policy of the
Department, which has the general support of authorities in school
administration and has been sustained by legislative enactment, in respect
to the elimination of duplication of school control when feasible, and the
concentration of the teaching and supervision forces so that school
facilities may be organized more economically and advantageously for the
benefit of as many pupils as may avail themselves conveniently of such
[Page 618 / Page 619] facilities. In view of the circumstance it must
appear that the conditions under which the order was executed are such as
to render it impossible to maintain the schools of the district under one
management without affecting injuriously the educational welfare and
interests of the children of the district.
There is no proof, or suggestion of proof, adduced by those favoring the
division that the children of the villages of Pelham and Pelham Manor will
receive additional or improved educational opportunities or advantages by
the establishment of a new district, or that they will be able to attend
school with less difficulty or inconvenience if the change is made. The
Siwanoy school and the high school are in the village of Pelham Manor,
conveniently accessible to the children in the new district, and the
division is not contemplated with a view of changing the location or
increasing the facilities of such schools. The only obvious effect of the
division will be to deprive the pupils in North Pelham of the privilege of
attending the high school in Pelham Manor, which has been erected and
maintained by the aid of the taxpayers of North Pelham so that their
children may have the advantage of secondary instruction within their own
district. The loss thus occasioned may be supplied only by the
establishment and maintenance of a high school in connection with the
elementary school now maintained in that village. The effect would be to
have two small high schools, each with forty or less pupils, in place of
the present comparatively strong high school. Such a change would result
in a substantial weakening of the local school organization and materially
lessen the school advantages of more than a majority of the children of
the community. The proposed division of the district will not improve
school conditions. The interests of the children of the entire district
are the State's first concern, and in this view of the situation it seems
clear that the 'educational interests of the community' described in the
respondent's order do not require the organization of a new district out
of the territory of the present district.
It may not be doubted that the district superintendent acted in good faith
and for what seemed to him to be for the benefit of all concerned, in
ordering the organization of a new district. [Page 619 / Page 620] There
was evident lack of harmony between the patrons of the school residing at
Pelham Manor and those at North Pelham. The respondent states in part
explanation of his position. 'Sectionalism does exist. It is not a
theory, but a condition. It may be regretted, but the fact remains.
Independent investigation has established this fact to my entire
satisfaction, etc.'
The proof adduced, the arguments and assertions of interested parties, the
briefs of attorneys, and communications on file in this Department
disclose forcefully enough that there was conflict between the two
sections of the district, based presumably on differences of social
conditions and environment. It is unnecessary to comment upon this aspect
of the case other than to note its influence upon the district
superintendent. He conceived it of sufficient importance to justify the
summary separation of the contending localities, and his views of the
situation are entitled to respectful consideration. I am unable, however,
after careful and thoughtful consideration, to come to his conclusion.
Half the children and one-quarter of the taxable property are left by the
order in the North Pelham district, while three-quarters of the wealth of
the district is chargeable with the education of the remainder of the
children of the district. This adjustment imposes an inequitable
financial burden upon the portion of the district having smaller resources
and greater obligations. The individual wealth of the residents of Pelham
and Pelham Manor is far greater than that of the residents of North
Pelham. None of the former have been heard to say that they are not
willing that the children of their North Pelham neighbors should share
equally with their own in the superior school facilities and advantages
which their greater wealth will enable them to provide. They could not
expect the district superintendent or the Commissioner of Education to
sustain a contention that the district should be divided for the reason
that they desired to afford their children certain educational advantages
or opportunities which were not suitable for other children in the
district. Such a contention strikes at the basis of our public school
system, which demands that our schools be free, with equal privileges, to
all. [Page 620 / Page 621]
The district as it now exists has sufficient financial resources to
furnish exceptional school facilities and appropriate instruction, whether
vocational or otherwise, to all children in the district, regardless of
their environment or their social status. If conflicting notions as to
the needs of the children of the district result in sectionalism and
dissension, retarding school development and seriously injuring the
educational interests of the children of the district, the Department, in
the exercise of its supervisory control of the schools of the district,
will endeavor by appropriate action to bring about a settlement of the
controversies. But lack of harmony or incompatibility between sections of
a district ought not to be regarded as a justification for a separation of
the contending portions, especially if it appears, as in this case, that a
majority of the children of the district may be deprived by the division
of substantial educational privileges.
'The appeal is sustained.
It is hereby ordered that the order executed on March 8, 1916, by Samuel
J. Preston, district superintendent of schools of the first supervisory
district of Westchester county, organizing a new school district to be
known as school district No. 2, town of Pelham in such county, out of a
portion of the territory of union free school district No. 1 of such town,
be and the same hereby is set aside and declared of no effect."
Source:
Department Reports of the State of New York Containing the Decisions,
Opinions and Rulings of the State Officers, Departments, Boards and
Commissions and Messages of the Governor, Vol. 9, pp. 616-21 (Albany,
NY: J.B. Lyon Co. 1916).
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/.
Please
Click Here for Index to All Blog Postings.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:22 AM
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February 4, 2010.
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