Author Topic: Millbury Street School  (Read 2920 times)

Judi Ann Remuck

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Millbury Street School
« on: December 25, 2004, 08:45:35 AM »
anyone out there attend Millbury Street school way back in late 60's?  I think its a Head Start now or something..anyway anyone out there...would love to chat

Darlene B.

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Re: Millbury Street School
« Reply #1 on: November 17, 2007, 10:45:22 AM »
Millbury St. School is still there. The original school was closed and the Quinsigamond School combined with it. Quinsigamond School was then added onto to accomodate 800+ students in grades preschool  to grade 6. It is now Quinsigamond Community School.The library that was next to Quinsigamond School is still there but no longer a library but the schools cafeteria. The school now takes the whole width between Stebbins St. and Falmouth St. It is huge!
The old Millbury St. School is now used for something else, not sure what.

chip t

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Re: Millbury Street School
« Reply #2 on: August 25, 2008, 12:36:28 PM »
i went to millbury st around 64 to68 dont remember to much but there was a teacher name mrs sweeny and i think the princibles name was dillon there was a house right nexts door and the swett family live there  and leanas market was on the corner of harlem st

Bobbo

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Re: Millbury Street School
« Reply #3 on: November 06, 2008, 08:37:49 PM »
I was there 1958 to 1961. Before that it was Ward Street School. Mr Cotter and Mr Mullins I remember well.We used to play baseball at recess with a rubber ball in the school yard. Up the hill was a wall with a fence on top where a three decker was. If we last a ball we'd have to come up with $.25 cents to buy a new one at that corner store. Clapping chaulk board erasers was a "cool" voluntary job. We also had the JFK fitness program and patches were won depending the level achieved. Milk came in glass bottles with cardboard stopper and paper cover delivered by milk truck. And a copying machine was a inked cylinder roller that you attached a stencil created by a typewriter with no ribbon. I also remember the Duncan yo-yo man who came every year to sell them and sponsor a contest.  After school fun was thowing dirt bombs into the Blackstone River.  And a trip to the Boston Museum of Science was way cool! ;D