This second edition of "The 1921 School 
	Review of Jefferson County, Texas" is a print replica of this document that 
	was donated to WT as he describes in the introduction. 
	When I read about this document in WT's article, my curiosity made me seek 
	it out and when I did, I immediately thought it was worth republishing for 
	its historic value. Certainly, WT felt the same way since his immediate 
	inclination was to donate a copy to Tyrrell Historical Library. 
	The quality of the document is not ideal 
	(it was published more than one hundred years ago in 1921), but is readable 
	and worth the effort for the photographs alone. I spent a lot of time 
	enhancing the images to improve the quality of the scans to the best of my 
	ability. 
	William T. Block III
	W. T. Block's son.
	As I write this column, I am looking at a 
	copy of "The 1921 School Review of Jefferson County, Texas," perhaps the 
	oldest and most authoritative, surviving analysis of the early county school 
	system. This is the second copy I have owned; the first was given to me by 
	E. S. "Red" Bellair of Port Neches, who had found the copy in a hidden niche 
	in the old C. O. Baird School. I promptly donated that copy to Tyrrell 
	Historical Library. 
	The 104-page booklet contains excellent 
	photos of the buildings, many school boards and faculties, and the student 
	bodies of all the schools then under Jefferson County School Superintendent 
	Mary Sandell. There are also articles about the new A. and M. Rice 
	Experiment Station at Amelia; the Interscholastic League competitions; and 
	the county school health department. 
	There are also excellent photos throughout 
	of the old Beaumont High School on College Street; the South Park School 
	buildings on Highland Ave.; of all the Port Arthur schools; and of the 
	French district schools. A separate volume was published earlier about 
	Charlton-Pollard High School. 
	As of 1921 some teachers still lacked 
	college degrees and taught only with county certificates of qualification. 
	The new minimum teacher salary was $100 a month, up $45 from 1917-1918. 
	Minimum salaries for principals and superintendents were $2,400 annually, up 
	$1,500 from 1917-1918. All schools were then teaching 9 months terms, 
	although some schools earlier had taught only 6 or 7 months in the year when 
	funds were exhausted. Most schools by then were teaching through the tenth 
	grade, although all schools had an 11th grade added by 1925. Six of the 
	fourteen school districts provided cottages for single women teachers.
	
	Fragment of a newspaper article written 
	about "The 1921 School Review of Jefferson County, Texas" by W. T. Block.