Sir,
In gratitude for the encouragement we have received from Her Majesty’s Government
for our school at St. Mary’s I beg to furnish a report on its state during the academic
year 1865-1866
The grant we have
receivedreceived from the Government in
August 1865 has enabled us to admit ten additional boys from amongst the numerous applicants
who were most anxious to become partakers of a good Education and thus we increased
our number to an average of sixty boarders.
In the beginning our endeavors have been more especially directed to develop the moral
intellectual and physical faculties
ofof the boys and furnish them with ideas and notions absolutely required before they
can read with interest and understand what they read, and one of our greatest satisfactions
is to notice the wonderful diffusion of those notions not only amongst the school
boys but also amongst the Indians in general. I have the same statement to make in
regard of the English language which begins to be more known
amongstamongst them. Then they will be able to comprehend fully the meaning of what they
read we hope that they will make the same progress in ready they have made in writing,
arithmetic, and geography.
In this last branch of study we have for instance to teach them the distance by the
time required to travel on foot or by canoe rather than by the number of miles.
The school boys are also
taught taught how to cultivate the soil and notwithstanding the natural indolence of the
native race the Fields and Gardens at St.Mary's will demonstrate the progress they
have made in this respect. I must state moreover that these boys do all that is to
be done in the establishment; some are fishermen, some wood choppers and bakers, some
cooks etc. etc. and filling their respective offices with a sort of point d’honneur
they they do it much better than we could ever have expected.
To their new habits of industry and serious bodily exercises as well as to their cleaner
and more comfortable lodging and their better regulated dirt, we attribute the remarkable
improvement in their health which has taken place. Three years ago when we commenced
our boarding school at St.Mary’s more than half the boys had the scrofula whilst at
the close of this
lastlast year only one of them was affected by it. During the last year two out of sixty
boys died, one by phthisis, and the other by a pustular disease, the latter patient
was removed by his parents and died in his village.
The Indians seem to appreciate more and more the benefit which their children are
deriving from their now modes of training and are well pleased to see Her Majesty’s
Government countenancing our
establishmentestablishment at St. Mary’s; it has made a good impression upon the Native population, a result
I am happy to notice.