A column written by M.H. Bennett in the Jan. 9, 1886, Press and Horticulturist newspaper laid out the education system in San Bernardino County, which included at that time what is now western Riverside County.

According to Bennett, every area with at least 10 children ages 10 to 17 received $500 a year to have a school that operated for at least eight months a year. If there were at least 90 children, the apportionment was $1,000, with another $500 for every 30 children above that.

Schools were divided into primary and grammar grades. The primary grades were first through fourth grades and the grammar classes consisted of fifth through eighth grades.

In 1886, the city of San Bernardino had 22 teachers altogether. The majority were located at its central city location, with the rest located in smaller schools scattered throughout its growing suburbs. The central school, a brick building that cost $25,000, had 500 children attending. Meanwhile, in Riverside, its downtown school had five teachers, with four more employed in its suburbs. The average monthly pay was $60 for primary teachers and $75 to $100 for grammar teachers.

One of the main tasks of the County Superintendent of Schools at that time was the testing of applicants for teachers’ certificates.


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