School Reward of Merit Given to George Putnam, 1818-1832

Summary

During the nineteenth-century, teachers recognized students with paper "rewards of merit." These small tokens commended a student's excellent work, perfect attendance, good behavior or other noteworthy accomplishment. Some contained simple handwritten sentiments from the teacher to the pupil. Many were printed and colorful, with space available to write in the student's name as well as their own.

During the nineteenth-century, teachers recognized students with paper "rewards of merit." These small tokens commended a student's excellent work, perfect attendance, good behavior or other noteworthy accomplishment. Some contained simple handwritten sentiments from the teacher to the pupil. Many were printed and colorful, with space available to write in the student's name as well as their own.

Artifact

Reward of merit

Date Made

1818-1832

Location

Not on exhibit to the public.

Object ID

2014.0.19.38

Credit

From the Collections of The Henry Ford.

Material

Paper (Fiber product)

Technique

Woodcut (Process)

Color

Black-and-white (Colors)

Dimensions

Height: 3.625 in

Width: 6.25 in

Inscriptions

REWARD OF MERIT. | This certifies that George Putnam | by diligence and good behavior, merits the appro- | bation of his friends and Instruct [illegible] | Printed and sold by DAVID WATSON, Woodstock, Vt.

Related Content

Connect 3

Discover curious connections between artifacts.

Learn More