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  1. The Manumit School was a progressive Christian socialist boarding school located in Pawling, New York, between 1924 and 1943, and from 1944 to 1958 in Bristol, Pennsylvania. [1] Founded on purchased farm land by Rev. William Fincke and his wife Helen, it was formerly called The Manumit School for Workers' Children.

  2. The Manumit School was a progressive Christian socialist boarding school located in Pawling, New York, between 1924 and 1943, and from 1944 to 1958 in Bristol, Pennsylvania. Founded on purchased farm land by Rev. William Fincke and his wife Helen, it was formerly called The Manumit School for Workers' Children.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Lee_MarvinLee Marvin - Wikipedia

    He attended Manumit School, a Christian socialist boarding school in Pawling, New York, during the late 1930s, and Peekskill Military Academy in Peekskill, New York. He later attended St. Leo College Preparatory School , a Catholic school in St. Leo, Florida, after being expelled from several other schools for bad behavior (smoking cigarettes ...

  4. This paper examines and discusses the Manumit School, which was founded in 1924 in Pawling, New York, by William and Helen Fincke. Manumit was described by its supporters as representing an alliance of progressive labor and progressive education. The school was rooted in the traditions and practices of progressive education and workers' education.

  5. Manumit School was a Christian socialist co-educational, elementary, non-denominational, boarding school in Pawling, NY, 1924-1943, then in Bristol, PA, 1944-1958. In 1924, Rev. William Mann Fincke and his wife, Helen Hamlin, founded Manumit as an elementary level, co-educational, boarding school on a working farm in Pawling, NY.

  6. Manumit School was a Christian socialist school in Pawling, NY, 1924-1943, then in Bristol, PA, 1944-1958. The collection is an assembled collection containing printed ephemera, correspondence, writings of the School's director (1933-1958), William Mann Fincke, who was a son of the co-founders, Reverend William Mann Fincke (d. 1927) and Helen ...

  7. On the farm, he and his wife established the Manumit School, a co-educational boarding school referred to as a "laborers' peace school for young children." [2] Manumit was also described as "an alliance of progressive labor and progressive education " and was associated with a number of New York City labor unions.