Long Description:
The historical marker reads:
"The first kindergarten in the United States was founded by
Margarethe Meyer Schurz in this building in 1856. Moved to the
present site and restored in 1956 by the Watertown Historical
Society."
From the Watertown History
web site:
"The kindergarten was founded in America by Margarethe Meyer
Schurz, wife of the famous German-American statesman Carl Schurz.
Mrs. Schurz was a native of Hamburg, Germany, and as a young woman
learned the principles of the kindergarten from its creator,
Friedrich Froebel. In the 1850s she came to London, where her
sister had founded the first kindergarten there.
While in London she met and married Carl Schurz, then a fugitive
from a Prussian jail. They came to America shortly thereafter and
settled at first on the east coast and then in 1855 they came to
Watertown where Carl Schurz had relatives. Once here Carl began an
active career in politics, while his wife set up housekeeping. But
she longed for something that would give purpose to her life, so
she began a small kindergarten class in the Schurz family home,
which was at one time located at 749 N. Church St. in 1856. The
Schurz home, known as “Karlshuegel” or “Carl’s Hill” burned to the
ground in 1912.
The class proved to be very successful, but the noise of the
children was too much for her husband, so she was forced to move
her class to a small frame building located originally on the
corner of N. Second and Jones Streets in Watertown. At the time the
dwelling was being used as a private home by Carl Schurz’s
parents.
It was in this little building that the kindergarten took off.
The original class numbered only about five students, the Schurz
children Agathe and Marianne, two Juessen girls (cousins of the
Schurz’s) and the lone boy Franklin Blumenfeld, son of the editor
of the local German-language newspaper. Mrs. Schurz ran her school
through 1857 when the Schurz family moved to Milwaukee. The
kindergarten continued sporadically here, always operated as a
private school, through the nineteenth century, finally becoming a
part of the public school curriculum after the turn of the last
century.
Mrs. Schurz died from complications of child birth in 1876 and
her remains are believed to have been transferred to her native
Hamburg, Germany. Her husband, Carl, rose through the political
ranks, first aiding Lincoln in his bid for president in 1860, then
becoming a general in the Union Army during the Civil War, later
Secretary of the Interior under Pres. Rutherford B. Hayes and
ultimately he went to work in the publishing field. He died in New
York in 1906.
As for the kindergarten building, after the Schurz family left
Watertown, the building passed through many hands, becoming a cigar
factory, fish store and religious book store. In the 1920s a local
women’s club, the Saturday Club, erected a memorial marker to
designate the historical significance of the building. Then in
1956, exactly 100 years after the founding of the kindergarten, the
little building was in danger of being razed. It was through the
efforts of Mrs. Rudy Herman and Gladys Mollart of the Watertown
Historical Society that the structure was saved and moved to the
grounds of the Octagon House, where it now rests. It has been open
to the public since 1957.