Article 4: Superintendent James Greenwood and Teacher Training Programs in the Kansas City, Missouri School District
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Published:2019
Curtis Mason, 2019. "Superintendent James Greenwood and Teacher Training Programs in the Kansas City, Missouri School District", American Educational History Journal Vol 46 Issue 1 & 2, Shirley Marie McCarther
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While recovering from the Civil War in 1860s, Kansas City acquired the site of the first bridge over the Missouri River, the Hannibal Bridge, which was completed in 1869. In doing so, Kansas City beat out competing cities like Leavenworth, Kansas; Atchison, Kansas; and St. Joseph, Missouri. This led to rapid population increases from 4,418 in 1860, 32,260 in 1870, 132,716 by 1890, and 248,381 in 1910 (Case 1888, 47; Gibson 1988). As the city grew, civic leaders saw the need to create a school district to handle the educational needs of the rising population. The Kansas City, Missouri School District was created in 1867, and after hiring two previous superintendents, in 1874, they recruited James Greenwood, a professor at a teacher-training institute, to manage the growth and expansion of the district.
