© University of Massachusetts Amherst. All rights reserved.
The New Salem Academy was founded February 25, 1795, "for the purposes of promoting piety, religion, and morality, and for instruction of youth in such languages and in such of the liberal arts and sciences as the trustees shall direct." Serving as both a private preparatory school and the town's high school, the Academy was the center of educational and cultural life in the small town. The school closed in 1968, reopening for a brief period in the 1980s.
This slender collection consists of the student exercise book of Ernest Howe Vaughan, later a teacher in the nearby town of Greenwich, Mass., and an attorney in Worcester, along with an issue of the alumni magazine, The Reunion Banner.
The collection is open for research.
Acquired from Donald Howe.
Processed by I. Eliot Wentworth, May 2015.