"The school was a one-story, two-room structure named the Cedar Street School, painted the popular color of the times, and located at the edge of the "town field" later called the "city field" and after the World War known as the Richard Trum Playground, so called to honor a boy, whom I knew, who gave his life for his country in America's unsuccessful attempt to make the world safe for democracy."
6 comments:
Third from the bottom right.
I can't say for sure, but this might be a different Richard Trum.
This text This guy?
I think of Trum Field as being in Ball Square rather than Winter Hill. (But I don't know who Trum was, either.)
Winter Hill is a state of mind...and that state of mind begins at Cedar St.
At this link, I found this:
"The school was a one-story, two-room structure named the Cedar Street School, painted the popular color of the times, and located at the edge of the "town field" later called the "city field" and after the World War known as the Richard Trum Playground, so called to honor a boy, whom I knew, who gave his life for his country in America's unsuccessful attempt to make the world safe for democracy."
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