University of Washington Libraries
Skip to content  Home : Favorites : Ordering and Use : Help : Blog   
Share
Digital Collections Special Collections : A-Z List : Subject List : Advanced Search  

« Historical Children's Literature Collection

add to favorites : reference url back to results : previous : next
 
Zoom in Zoom out Pan left Pan right Pan up Pan down Maximum resolution Fit in window Fit to width Rotate left Rotate right Hide/show thumbnail
The eclectic primer: with progressive lessons for young children (p. 22)
The eclectic primer: with progressive lessons for young children (p. 22)
TitleThe eclectic primer: with progressive lessons for young children (p. 22)
AuthorMcGuffey, William Holmes, 1800-1873
PublisherTruman and Smith
Publisher LocationUnited States -- Ohio -- Cincinnati
Publication Date1837
PrinterUnknown
IllustratorUnknown
Image Production ProcessRelief prints--woodcuts
NotesChapbook with uncolored woodcut illustrations.
Fourteenth edition.
Part of the Eclectic School Series.
Primer with lessons that get progressively more difficult until by the end, the child is reading short stories.
Designed to precede W. H. M'Guffey's Eclectic Readers.
This lesson is titled "The Sick Little Girl" and ends "You may be sick, and I may be sick. We may all be sick and soon have to die." The illustration depicts a sick girl in bed while her mother sits by her side.
Contextual NotesMcGuffey was born and raised in the Ohio River valley. He graduated from Washington and Jefferson College in Pennsylvania and taught at Miami University (Oxford, OH) before accepting the presidency of several area colleges. He was better at teaching than administering and ultimately landed at the University of Virginia where he enjoyed success as a scholar and teacher. In 1836, McGuffey contracted with Truman and Smith to create a series of readers. These 19th century readers became some of the best known school books in the history of American education. As of 1961, it is estimated that over 122 million copies had been sold. According to publisher Smith, McGuffey's books were "adapted to the habits, energy, and ideals of the frontier people of the West." Their success relied on careful selection of material, vocabularies and concepts that were challenging, and solid morality lessons.
Subjects (LCSH)Readers (Primary)
CategoryPrimers (Instructional books)
Readers
LanguageEnglish
Digital CollectionChildren's Historical Literature Collection
Digital ID NumberCHL0126
RepositoryUniversity of Washington Libraries, Special Collections Division
Repository CollectionChildren's Historical Literature Collection
Object TypeChapbook
Physical Description35 p.: illustrated; 15 x 9.5 cm.
Digital Reproduction InformationPhotographed from original book in TIFF format using a Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi/EOS 400D, resized and enhanced using Adobe Photoshop, and imported as JPEG2000 using Contentdm's software JPEG2000 Extension. 2009.
Exhibit ChecklistExhibit checklist 11.10
add to favorites : reference url back to results : previous : next
Contact Us | Change display settings | About | Make a Gift | Privacy ^ to top ^