83:. While the boys at the Parkchester campus received training in the building trades, printing, shoemaking, tailoring, photography, and other potential job-related skills, the boys at Lincolndale learned farming and agricultural skills, with the intent that they might be placed out on farms. Rather than living in a large dormitory, a number of cottages were built, each housing fifty boys, with each cottage under the direction of two brothers. The School produced its own food on the dairy farm and truck farm. Fruits and vegetables were canned and preserved.
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The Rev. Brother
Barnabas, head of the Lincoln Agricultural School, a Catholic institution at Lincolndale, N.Y., furnished the stir at the first day's conference on Industrial and Vocational Training for Boys and Girls in Institutions, held yesterday in the Assembly Room in the Metropolitan Life
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In "Brother
Barnabas" by W. J. Battersby PhD, it states BB became director in January 1909 of the school renaming it the next month for Abraham Lincoln. He was there until 1914. This seems more likely than 1912 since he was appointed to serve on a White House Child Welfare committee in 1909 .
67:. In 1902, the brothers opened St. Philip's Home on Broome Street in Manhattan as transitional housing for boys who had "aged out" of the Protectory's care program. It assisted with job placement and served as a center to help former students establish themselves to live independently.
105:"Word was received here yesterday of the death in Albuquerque, N.M., of Brother Barnabas, F.S.C., the founder of Lincoln Agricultural School, Lincolndale, N.Y., and for several years executive secretary of the Boys' Life Bureau of the Knights of Columbus"
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Member of New York
Province of Christian Schools Brotherhood in West for Health. To Be Buried in Santa Fe. Native of Ogdensburg, N.Y., Was Active in Behalf of Child Welfare and Education.
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39:. It opened in 1912 for orphans to be trained for agricultural and industrial work. In time, this evolved into
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Munch, Janet Butler. "At Home in the Bronx: Children at the New York
Catholic Protectory 1865-1938".
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In 1907, the
Protectory purchased a number of farms in Lincolndale, a hamlet in
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165:"Rev. Brother Barnabas Attacks Principle of Working Home Inmates for Gain"
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section of the Bronx. The Boys
Department was managed by the
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20:Boys at the Lincolndale Agricultural School in
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256:Educational institutions established in 1912
219:The Bronx County Historical Society Journal
206:"Our History", Lincolndale Hall Boys' Haven
29:Lincolndale Agricultural School for Boys
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251:1912 establishments in New York (state)
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134:Smith, Joseph F. (August 26, 1917).
241:Defunct schools in New York (state)
136:"Preparedness in Catholic schools"
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221:. 52, 1/2 (Spring, 2015): 30-48
65:Sisters of Charity of New York
31:was a Catholic charity run by
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81:Westchester County, New York
53:New York Catholic Protectory
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196:Lincoln Hall, Home Page
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37:Lincolndale, New York
22:Lincolndale, New York
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246:Agricultural schools
61:Christian Brothers
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41:Lincoln Hall
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57:Parkchester
235:Categories
183:Buildings.
177:2009-08-22
150:2009-08-21
117:2009-08-22
91:References
47:Background
71:History
77:Somers
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