The Public High School 25 



high schools for their respective communities, notably in New 

 Hampshire and Vermont. The Alabama schools noted in the 

 tables are the " congressional district agricultural schools." It 

 is the plan of the state department of education soon to include 



Table 2 



Secondary Schools Classified as Agricultural High Schools by 



Law, Popular Reputation, Local Claims, or on the Merits 



OF Their Curriculum, for the Year 1908-9 



Alabama 9 (new county high school not included) 



Arkansas (see note "e" under Table 1) 



California 2 



Georgia 12 



Louisiana 9 



Maryland 1 (now 2) 



Massachusetts 3 



Michigan 1 



Minnesota 1 



Mississippi 6 



New York 3 



Oklahoma 2 (now 6) 



Pennsylvania 1 



Virginia 5 (now 10) 



Wisconsin 5 (7 by September, 1910) 



Total 60 for 1908-9 ; including those since 



located or authorized ... 76 



a four-year course in agriculture in the new county high schools, 

 34 of which have already been organized. These do not appear 

 in the tables. 



Tables i, 2, 3, and 4 include not only schools reporting directly, 

 but those about which there is little doubt. Therefore, they are 

 approximate rather than exact. The totals should probably be 



Table 3 



Special Schools Classified According to the Size of the Geo- 

 graphical Unit Served 



State high schools, not counting high-school departments located at the 



agricultural colleges 8 



Special district schools of Arkansas (not yet started) 4 



Congressional district schools of Alabama, Georgia, and Virginia 29 



Judicial and other districts of Oklahoma 6 



Total 47 



County high schools of purely agricultural type 13 



County high schools with agriculture and general courses 29 



Total 42 



