John Henry Haaren
John Henry Haaren (born August 13, 1855, New York, New York – d. September 23, 1916, Brooklyn, New York) was an American educator and historian.
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Haaren's father was German and his mother Irish and English. He studied under Prof. N. M. Butler at Columbia University, 1889–91, before becoming a teacher in New York. In 1907 he became Associate Superintendent of Schools in New York, increasing the number and efficiency of kindergartens and starting classes to teach English to foreigners.[1]
He was president of the department of pedagogy in the Brooklyn Institute.[2] Haaren High School (which was located on 10th Avenue between 58th and 59th Streets in Manhattan) was named in his honor. The Charles B. J. Snyder-designed school which was initially DeWitt Clinton High School is now Haaren Hall on the campus of the John Jay College of Criminal Justice[3]
Works
- Addison B. Poland (1904). Famous Men of Rome.
- Addison B. Poland (1904). Famous Men of the Middle Ages.
- Addison B. Poland (1904). Famous Men of Greece.
- Addison B. Poland (1909). Famous Men of Modern Times.
- Fairy Life: Third Reader Grade. 1896.
- Addison B. Poland (1914). First Notions of Geography.
References
- The American Catholic Who's Who, 1911
- Herringshaw, T. W., Herringshaw's national library of American biography, 5 vols, 1909-14.
- F.Y.I., New York Times, December 16, 2001
External links
- Works by John Henry Haaren at Project Gutenberg
- Works by or about John Henry Haaren at Internet Archive
- Works by John Henry Haaren at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)