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[Note: This document is undated, but appears to date from the 1930s.]
R. Gray Williams, President
John M. Steck, President
H. S. Duffey, Superintendent
As one goes about Winchester visiting many points, there stands out like a fair castle land the
Handley School Building, and the story of Judge John Handley, and his bequest to Winchester
savors just as strongly of the legendary.
"All the rest and residue of my estate I give, devise, and bequeath to the City of Winchester to be
accumulated for the period of twenty years. The income arising from said residue estate to be
expended and laid out in said city by the erection of school houses for the education of the
poor."
When the money was received, Winchester had grown until it had a population of nearly ten
thousand, but, even, with that gain in size, it was thought that the sum of nearly two million
dollars would erect a building which the city could not afford to maintain, so a friendly suit
resulted in a court construction of the will, setting aside as an endowment fund $1,200,000.00,
the balance to be used for building. The grounds consisting of seventy-two acres, were a part of
the bequest.
The Handley School, as it now stands and with the grounds being developed from year to year,
represents an expenditure of nearly a million dollars and is housing the junior and senior high
schools and grades four, five and six of the elementary department. It was the original plan to
include all of the white children under a single roof, but an increase of seventy percent in the
school population has necessitated the retention of the old school plant for primary grades and
the addition of at least one more building.
It may be interesting to some to know that the endowment is not administered by the School
Board, but by the Handley Board of Trustees, created by an act of the Legislature of the state as a
fiduciary body, and it has borne well in trust, for not a single dollar of principal nor interest has
ever been lost through bad investment or otherwise.
The building was erected in 1922-23, and of which Mr. W. R. McCornack of Cleveland, Ohio
was the architect, is of the one-story plan, colonial brick, 535 feet long, and 180 feet deep. It is
distinctly of the colonial type, as the illustrations show, and the architect has followed as a motif
the buildings of the University of Virginia at Charlottesville, Virginia, designed by Thomas
Jefferson. It stands on a promontory which makes it visible some distance away on many of the
approaches to the city and affords from its portico a magnificent view of the Blue Ridge
mountains and the gorgeous Shenandoah Valley for many miles, a view which is calculated to
develop the esthetic sense of the children. Situated immediately in front of the building is the
stadium with its athletic field surrounded by a quarter-mile running track.
The Handley School grounds have become the center of many activities. The Annual
Shenandoah Valley Apple Blossom Festival, which is Winchester's most notable celebration, is
held each spring about May first and draws to the community more than a hundred thousand
visitors. Practically all of the events of the festival, except the parades, are held on these grounds
and the enormity of the entire performance may hardly be appreciated except by those who have
been present. It is of metropolitan rather than small town proportions and the Handley School
organization furnishes all of the pageantry.
The building itself supplies a long-felt need for a community center. The auditorium with its
seating capacity of sixteen hundred, and fully equipped stage, the gymnasium, and the indoor
play court, with its regulation concrete tennis court, afford excellent facilities for community
entertainment and recreation, and the appreciation of the citizens is evidenced by the fact that
these features are in constant use after school hours.
Without giving the details of dimensions and briefly enumerating the contents, in addition to
those already mentioned, the administrative section includes superintendent's business office,
superintendent's private office, school board meeting room, educational research room, men's
rest room, ladies' rest room, principal's business office, high school principal's private office,
elementary grade principal's private office, school store, clinic and dispensary, and ample storage
rooms.
In the instructional unit there are thirty-six classrooms, all with side and overhead lighting,
equipped throughout with moveable furniture scaled to sizes. Most of the rooms have outside
exits and are equipped with artificial heating devices for drying damp clothes of the youngsters in
wet weather. There are also a cafeteria, study hall, library, nature study court, special classrooms,
and laboratories for music, science, domestic science and the industrial departments, piano
practice rooms, and a large, well designed and equipped room for the class for mentally deficient
children. An art gallery and museum, 20 feet by 150 feet, has been provided and already there
are on exhibition copies of many of the masterpieces of art, busts of Virginia heroes, and relics
intimately associated with the historical past of the community.
Many large cities would consider themselves fortunate to have Winchester's physical equipment
for educational purposes, and, therefore, the pride of this small Virginia city in its achievement is
pardonable and not in any sense inordinate conceit.
It may also be said that Winchester Public Schools are entitled to some distinction educationally.
Under the rating given by the State Board of Education, this system has been rated first of all of
the cities of the state, irrespective of size, over a period of the last five or six years. The
personnel of the teaching force is of high calibre and an effort is made to keep the salary schedule
upon a basis in proportion to living costs. Reasonably small instructional ratios are maintained,
that of pupil-teacher being thirty-three to one, teacher-supervisor fourteen to one, and teacher-
principal eighteen to one. Care is take to provide teachers with adequate instructional apparatus
and supplies. Modern pedagogical procedure is followed and every effort exerted to make all
conditions conducive to a liberal educational return. Recent surveys and the application of
standard measurements indicate that excellent results are being gotten.
The Handly Library was also bequeathed to the city and endowed by Judge Handley and is the
free public library of Winchester. The building is of Indiana limestone and is located at the
corern of Braddock and Piccadilly streets in the heart of the city opposite the U.S. Post
Office.
There are 20,000 volumes on open shelves with a circulation in excess of 65,000 in 1929.
Twenty daily newspapers and nearly a hundred magazines are currently received and on file. The
collection of reference books is complete and comprehensive, and there are special collections of
Virginia and Civil War history.
The Library heartily cooperates with the Handley School in all phases of its work and together
they comprise an educational unit for all the people of Winchester, child and adult alike.
It is probable, in the final analysis, that the most distinctive feature of this small Virginia city is
that it has an endowed public school system and has shown that an endowed public school
system is as practicable as an endowed institution of higher education. Winchester is already the
beneficiary of three endowments, the John Kerr Building Fund, the Handley Foundation, and the
Lucien Lupton Horticultural Endowment, and there are two more in which the schools will share
in later years. The feeling the General Education Board was the city would be pauperized, but
such has not been the result, for in the comparatively short time the Foundations has been in
operation the city has quadrupled in its appropriation and for the first time in its history has voted
a bond issue for schools.
When the Handley Fund became available to the Winchester Schools only a comparatively small
appropriation was being made from the city's income and there was an impression in the
community that the citizens would be relieved, by the endowment, of any future taxation for
schools. Of course, one realizes immediately that nothing could be more disastrous from the
standpoint of local interest, aside from the necessity for additional funds as the school system
grew and it has grown even beyond the expectations of those most intimately associated with the
project. So it has been the policy of the administration to carry on a campaign of publicity
through the years which would acquaint the people generally with the accomplishments and
needs of the schools and, thereby, a favorable sentiment has been established and when any
request for increase has been made the public in general and the legislation in particular have
realized that there is reason in the request and not once in the past six or seven years has there
been a lack of cooperation between the City Council and the School Board.
For the benefit of those interested in public school publicity, the two most effective principles
applied in Winchester have been (1) get the patrons and friends into the schools, while in session,
just as often as possible, and (2) get the teachers into the homes of the patrons at least once every
year. The night session held each fall for grades 6 to 12, inclusive, always draws to the Handly
Building more than twelve hundred patrons and friends, and these people distribute themselves in
the class rooms for the bona fide recitations. The general reaction each year has been decidedly
favorable and the attendance continually grows. Every school system has something to sell to the
public and in Winchester the results indicate that the salesmanship has been effective.
Judging by this city's experience, a community not only will not be pauperized, but, upon the
contrary, will rise up in a unanimity of support to send on to even greater achievements the
educational possibilities offered the children. It is not impossible that the time may come when
Winchester will be recognized as the pioneer in demonstrating that an endowed public school
system is productive of most excellent results.
M. M. Lynch, Vice-President
Harry F. Byrd
C. Vernon Eddy, Secretary
T. J. Cooper
H. D. Fuller
H. B. McCormac
John L. Sloat
A. M. Baker, Treasurer
Hunter H. McGuire, Vice-President
William G. Hardy, Clerk
Stewart Bell
J. Fred Goss
W. M. Lupton
Warren Rice
Howard Shockley
W. R. Talbot
G. R. Quarles, High School Principal
Miss Bessie L. Corkey, Elementary Grade Principal
Mrs. Edna Eighmey Petrescu, Primary Grade Principal

The Handley School Building
Nothing was heard from this letter for months, until the Winchester gentleman received a large
package containing plan and specifications for the establishment of the Equity Improvement
Company, a project which proposed the erection of a hotel, factories and homes and which
involved quite and industrial development. The stock in this company was to be sold at a low
par and on the partial-payment plan so that every citizen might have a part. Gradually dissension
arose among the directors and the scheme failed after the purchase of large parcels of land and
the erection of a hotel. Judge Handley lost considerable money in the project, but his faith in the
community never faltered, and after his death the following provision was found in his will.





© 2001, Jeffrey C. Weaver, Arlington, VA
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