Knowledge, learning, and virtue, being essential to the preservation of republican institutions, and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education throughout the different portions of the State, being highly conducive to the promotion... Andrew Jackson and Early Tennessee History - Page 168by Samuel Gordon Heiskell - 1918 - 687 pagesFull view - About this book
| Francis Newton Thorpe - Charters - 1909 - 628 pages
...Knowledge, learning, and virtue being essential to the preservation of republican institutions, and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education...cherish literature and science. And the fund called the " common-school fund," and all the lands and proceeds thereof, dividends, stocks, and other property... | |
| Eli Foster Ritter - Civil law - 1910 - 304 pages
..."Knowledge, learning, and virtue being essential to the preservation of republican institutions, and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education...this government, to cherish literature and science. . . ." Vermont. Chap, 1, Art. 3, 1793 : ". . . Nevertheless, every sect or denomination of Christians... | |
| Arthur Cecil Perry - School management and organization - 1912 - 104 pages
...Knowledge, learning, and virtue, being essential to the preservation of republican institutions, and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education...science. And the fund called the common school fund . . . shall remain a perpetual fund, the principal of which shall never be diminished by legislative... | |
| Samuel Windsor Brown - Church and education - 1912 - 184 pages
...Knowledge, learning and virtue being essential to the preservation of republican institutions, and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education...this government to cherish literature and science." Constitution 1834, Art. XI, Sec. 10.) Texas: "A general diffusion of knowledge being essential to the... | |
| Will Thomas Hale, Dixon L. Merritt - Tennessee - 1913 - 284 pages
..."Knowledge, learning and virtue being essential to the preservation of Republican institutions, and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education...highly conducive to the promotion of this end, It is held, "it shall be the duty of the General Assembly in all future periods of this Government to... | |
| Wallace McClure - Constitutional history - 1916 - 492 pages
...may enable STATE CONSTITUTION-MAKING. CONSTITUTION OF 1870.— (Cont'a.) llcau institutions, and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education...cherish literature and science. And the fund called commou school fund, and all the lands and proceeds thereof, dividends, stocks, and other property of... | |
| Wallace McClure - Constitutional history - 1916 - 520 pages
...enable 29 STATE CONSTITUTION-MAKING. CONSTITUTION OF 1870. — (Cont'd.) lican institutions, and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education...cherish literature and science. And the fund called common school fund, and all the lands and proceeds thereof, dividends, stocks, and other property of... | |
| James William Turner - Education - 1920 - 464 pages
..."Knowledge, learning and virtue, being essential to the preservation of republican institutions; and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education...this government to cherish literature and science." By authority of this provision Tennessee now has a splendid public school system based on laws passed... | |
| Illinois. Office of the Superintendent of Public Instruction - Education - 1921 - 958 pages
...Knowledge, learning and virtue being essential to the preservation of republican institutions, and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education...this government to cherish literature and science. Texas— 1876. Article VII. Sec. 1. A general diffusion of knowledge being essential to the preservation... | |
| Evolution - 1925 - 356 pages
...knowledge, learning and virtue, being essential to the preservation of republican institutions, and the diffusion of the opportunities and advantages of education...the different portions of the state, being highly :onducive to the promotion of this ;nd, it shall be the duty of the general assembly in all future... | |
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