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Eagleswood Military Academy

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The Eagleswood Military Academy was a private military academy in Perth Amboy , in Middlesex County , New Jersey , United States, which served antebellum educational needs.

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5-581: The Eagleswood Military Academy was started by Rebecca Spring (1812–1911) and Marcus Spring (1810–1874) in 1861 in the vicinity of the Route 35 /Smith Street intersection. The Springs initially started the Raritan Bay Union , as a utopian community in 1853, but the Union closed in 1860. Rebecca had the bodies of A.D. Stevens and A.E. Hazlett, from John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry , buried on her property. In 1899

10-769: The National Register of Historic Places as the George Inness House and was demolished in 1993. George Inness , the American painter, stayed at the home in the 1860s. Edward L. Kemeys (1843–1907) was another artist who spent time in residence at Eagleswood. The start of the American Civil War caused many of the Academy's teachers to join the war effort and the school was forced to close, having inadequate staff and enrollment to continue its existence. Several years later,

15-564: The bodies were disentereed and moved, with the bodies of other raiders (see John Brown's Raiders ) to the John Brown Farm State Historic Site , near Lake Placid, New York . The grounds, approximately 260 acres (110 ha), were recorded in the largest survey conducted by Henry David Thoreau . The Eagleswood Mansion was located on the grounds. The house was listed on the New Jersey Register of Historic Places and

20-723: The site became the Eagleswood Park Hotel until 1888, when the Eagleswood estate was sold by the Mutual Benefit Life Insurance Company to Calvin Pardee. He built a ceramic tile company on the site. Marcus Spring Marcus Spring (October 21, 1810 – August 22, 1874) was, with his wife Rebecca Buffum Spring , the creator of the Raritan Bay Union , a utopian community in Perth Amboy, New Jersey . He

25-485: Was born in Northbridge, Massachusetts , in 1810 to Adolphus Spring (1772–1847) and Lydia Taft (1772–1838) and attended Uxbridge Academy . In 1831 he moved to New York City and was a cotton merchant. He married Rebecca Buffum (1812–1911), a wealthy Quaker, on October 16, 1836. The Springs were the traveling companions of feminist author Margaret Fuller during Fuller's tour of Europe in 1846 and 1847. Around 1850 he became

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