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Mr Samuel Willard
RUDIMENTS OF READING,
OR
A COMBINED SYSTEM OF SPELLING , PRONUNCIA-
TION, DEFINITION AND RHETORICAL
EXPRESSION;
In which it is the leading design, that the learner,
from the time he leaves his abs till he becomes
an adept in the elocution of current language,
shall always understand what he reads, and be
prepared to give it a ready pronunciation;
In four small volumes;
VOL. I.
BY SAMUEL WILLARD,
MINISTER OF DEERFIELD.
"Feed my lambs." JESUS CHRIST.
"I would rather speak five words with my mean-
ing understood than ten thousand words in an un-
known tongue." ST. PAUL.
GREENFIELD:
PRINTED BY DENIO AND PHELPS.
1815.
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(c) Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, Deerfield MA. All rights reserved.
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Of the three "R's" ("reading, 'riting, and 'rithmetic"), reading was from the earliest days of the Puritan settlement the most important school subject. In 17th and early 18th century New England, each town's Congregational minister and the town's elected Selectmen were required to see that every child in their town learn to read the Bible. Ministers continued to be leaders in education in New England even after the American Revolution that had established the idea of "the separation of church and state." Although schoolbooks became less theological and Calvinist, they continued to be very moral in tone and strongly Judeo-Christian in content. This reader by the Rev. Samuel Willard, liberal Unitarian minister in Deerfield in the early 1800's, reflects this trend. Note on this title page of his Reader both his commitment to educational reform and his quotes from Jesus and St. Paul.
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"Rudiments of Reading"
printer John Denio |
printer Ansel Phelps |
author Reverend Samuel Willard (1776-1859) |
date 1815 |
location Greenfield, Massachusetts |
height 5.5" |
width 3.5" |
process/materials printed paper, ink |
item type Books/Textbook / Schoolbooks |
accession # #L00.010 |
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