| A Tribute to Janet
Daniels Schenck

During 1917–1918,
the School is established by Janet Daniels Schenck
(pictured) at the Union Settlement on East 104th Street, later
moving to a
brownstone on East 105th Street. She is Director until retiring
in 1956.
Janet D. Schenck and the Early History of
Manhattan School of Music (1917 – 1943)
[All uncited quotes in the following biography
are from Mrs. Schenck’s 1961 book, Adventure in Music,
about the early years and development of Manhattan School
of Music.]
Janet Daniels Schenck was an accomplished pianist
who had studied in Europe with the great Harold Bauer. A graduate
of the New York School of Social Work, she was deeply interested
in New York’s immigrant groups, in particular the Polish,
Italian, and Russian communities in northern Manhattan. Mrs.
Schenck decided that she could best serve those communities
by teaching what was most important to her: music. She persuaded
the Union Settlement on East 104th Street to donate space
for studios, where young people of that neighborhood could
receive music lessons. She recruited teachers from the high
school-age girls who belonged to the Junior League of the
Settlement’s Auxiliary Board. The lessons, which began in
the fall of 1917, were offered to all comers at a token fee
of ten cents each.
This small school was to eventually become Manhattan
School of Music. Schenck taught piano students herself, and
continued to do so as the School grew and developed over the
next forty years. She was the director of the School until
her retirement in 1956, when she was named Director Emeritus.
She died in 1976 at age 93.
Although the School was created to serve one
section of Manhattan, the international musical community
was involved from the beginning. In 1918, Mrs. Schenck’s piano
teacher and mentor Harold Bauer and the renowned cellist and
humanitarian Pablo Casals agreed to become founding members
of the Artist Auxiliary Board, a nucleus of artists who through
the years have offered artistic and professional assistance
to the School. Other early members of the Board included pianist
Ernest Schelling and violinist Fritz Kreisler.
As a member of Manhattan School of Music’s
Artist Auxiliary Board, Pablo Casals arranged auditions for
advanced students, and, on his rare visits to New York, made
a point of coming to the School to speak to its pupils. To
quote the New York Times on the occasion of one of
these visits, “These young people will long remember the small,
dedicated figure telling them how proud a thing it is to be
a musician and that nothing less than the utmost simplicity
and sincerity are required to serve the art truly.”
The School’s first Charter
was issued in 1920. The School was officially named the Neighborhood
Music School and incorporated in that year. Two years later,
the Neighborhood Music School purchased its first real home,
a “rather old building” at 238 East 105th Street, to house
an ever-growing number of students.
“It was in a bad state
of repair. The students, however, were delighted with their
new home and proud when they had raised $250 to help decorate
the rooms. Trustees, students, and staff painted chairs
and hung curtains….”
The curriculum of the School
expanded to include not only the instrument lesson, but also
music history; “rhythmic dancing”; experiments in the first
approach to music for the child; special classes for adults;
orchestras; ensembles; and choruses. The classes in music
theory and composition, sight-singing, ear-training, and keyboard
harmony were developed with an extensive correlation between
these subjects and the private lesson.
Although the work required to grow her school was consuming,
Janet Schenk continually found time for research on the topic
of the many community music schools that were scattered throughout
the U.S. She published this research in a 1923 booklet, Music
School and Settlements Music Departments and then was
convinced three years later, through its popularity, to append
her findings in Music, Youth and Opportunity — A Survey
of Settlement Community Schools.
Back at the Neighborhood Music School, the “rather old building”
soon became inadequate and was razed in 1928 to make way for
a new building on the same site. The new five-story building
was “completely equipped with new pianos and furnishings,
a cafeteria, and a small recital hall…. Nearly 400 students
were enrolled, and the faculty reached approximately 50 members….
There could be no turning back. Our School of Music was here
to stay!”
In 1938, the name of the School was changed to Manhattan School
of Music, in part to reflect the growing national and international
character of the student body. Also that year, the School
added its first hall for symphonic concerts, Hubbard Auditorium.
Mrs. Schenck was elected President of the newly formed National
Guild of Community Music Schools in 1940. This organization
was concerned with “meeting the need of concerted action in
focusing attention on the nature and purpose of community
music schools.” In addition to Manhattan School of Music,
the Guild included as its members: the All Newton Music School
(Massachusetts), Brooklyn Music School Settlement (New York),
Cleveland Music School Settlement (Ohio), The Settlement School
of Philadelphia (Pennsylvania), and the Turtle Bay Music School
(New York), among others.
Mrs. Schenck’s philosophy of music education hinged on the
advancement of the complete person. She wrote the following
impassioned plea in a 1940 issue of The Quarterly:
“Is not the very key to
our whole work the conviction that everything one does in
life contributes to the completion of one's personality,
and that only by thinking clearly and definitely, and performing
with the utmost precision and devotion, can our use of music
fulfill its potential influence in the shaping of our lives?
Unless we are willing to shout from the housetops our belief
in standards, we are giving the lie to the whole
renaissance in music education, in the shaping of which
I firmly believe we have played a conspicuous part… The
matter of the actual diploma being awarded is of course
a subject for debate; but I believe it is important if we
are to have any connection with the general academic work
of our time. Let us bear in mind, once and for all, that
a diploma presented in a School of modern educational tendencies
means nothing more than the indication of a goal passed,
an effort established, and a human being who has taken one
more step on the ladder of his attainments.”
Mrs. Schenck would soon
endorse the need for issuing diplomas at her own beloved school
as well. She realized that “it was becoming increasingly apparent
that young people, taking up the composition or performance
or teaching of music as a profession would, in the future,
be required to earn a college degree as a badge of accomplishment
and achievement in their art.”
Then, a few years later, an effort to turn the School into
a college of music — under the guidance of Mrs. Schenck
and through the persistence of Dean of Student Josephine Whitford
— changed the School forever. “In December, 1943, our
Charter was amended authorizing the Bachelor of Music degree…We
had become a college.”
An excerpt from Adventure in Music
Genesis
By Janet D. Schenck
A small girl moved slowly around her play-room
in a suburb of Chicago. A canary flew in and out of the
open cage door. In a semi-circle stood eight, small empty
chairs. The little girl took her stand by the other piece
of furniture — a blackboard — and turned to
open the discussion with her class. This picture remains
in my mind as one of the clearest recollections of a lively
and happy childhood. For of course I was that child.
As I grew older and went through public schools,
boarding schools and college courses, I continued to regard
with the utmost interest the person who faced the class
as I had faced my imaginary pupils. Was he as excited as
I had been? Was he wondering if those chairs, now occupied,
held students sure to "make their way" and accomplish
their desires? Or were there some chairs holding restless,
uncooperative young people waiting to appraise him? And
if the latter, how then could he reach those students, how
establish a basis for discussion? This was, to me, a matter
of the utmost importance.
My family on my mother's side had included
lawyers and college professors of some distinction. When
quite young I had my first Latin lessons perched on the
arm of my uncle's chair — he was professor of Latin
at Hamilton College. I promptly forgot my Latin but never
the charm of the instruction. In my father's family there
were doctors, medical missionaries, bankers, business men,
and even a distinguished scientist. But there were no musicians.
When I was twelve years old, my family decided
that it would be worth the expense to see if the constant
keyboard activity in which I was indulging could by any
chance be improved. Lessons began, and, happily, it became
evident that at least this much of a result could be attained.
In boarding school in New York, I was thrown
for the first time with other music students, and suddenly
I became aware of a contagion in art. We played for each
other; we discussed what we liked to call the relation of
art to life. My mind was made up. My principal basis of
communication with my fellow creatures would be the most
beautiful, the most flexible, the most embracing of the
arts — I would be a musician.
Now this decision was not so easy to carry
out as might at first have been imagined. For, as my aunt
said, "You know you are the only girl in our entire
family who has not gone to Bryn Mawr." This deplorable
situation my many relatives for some time continued to stress,
hoping to remedy this defect.
After boarding school, I entered one of the
best of the New York music schools and took additional courses
at Columbia University. All these details are of no importance
except for one incident. The head of the music school at
which I had studied was an amazing spiritual and musical
personality. She was Miss Kate Chittenden of the American
Institute of Applied Music. She had a profound influence
on my thinking and the following episode made her association
with my life of peculiar importance.
Shortly after graduating, I went abroad for
the summer with my sister and cousin. On arrival in Paris
we rang the bell at an address we had found in our Baedeker
and where we hoped to secure rooms. At that same moment
the door opened and, out of all the population of Paris,
there stood this remarkable woman, who was on her own tour
of Europe. With her help it was finally arranged that we
should stay at the pension. That night at dinner she tossed
a card over to me, and to my astonished eyes it read, "To
Harold Bauer, introducing my young friend, Janet Daniels."
And this indomitable woman added, "I want you to stay
and study piano with him if he will accept you, and I am
writing to your father to ask if you can do so."
And so started my friendship with that great
artist, Harold Bauer, (for I was accepted as his pupil)
which was to have such an important bearing not only on
my own life but on the development of Manhattan School of
Music.
I was left alone in Paris and it was arranged
that I should live with friends of Mr. Bauer's. The three
Chaigneau sisters were a well-known concert trio and three
or four young American musicians were staying with them
in the attractive little house set in a garden which you
entered from the Avenue Victor Hugo. Among them was Wynne
Pyle, the beautiful and gifted young American concert pianist
who was later to become Mrs. Harold Bauer. After her return
to New York she took a continuing interest in our School,
often coaching some of the gifted students, as well as sending
other pupils to Mr. Bauer's Master Classes held at the School.
When Mr. Bauer was away on tour I would study
piano and ensemble with the Chaigneaus — how well
I remember the terrifying experience of those first ensemble
classes when, often as not, one of their artist friends
would drop in to hear us play. But the important point for
me was the impression made by coming in personal touch with
so many of the great artists and other distinguished men
and women who came to the Chaigneau home. The music I heard
there became the motivating experience of my life. I shall
never forget the evenings when the incomparable artistry
of Pablo Casals in that intimate setting brought to me an
assurance of things hoped for, which I had only dimly envisioned.
And then there was General Piquart — his magnificent
championship of Dreyfus in one of the most famous of French
trials had made him a hero in my eyes. The scrapbooks my
older cousin had compiled on the subject when she had been
studying previously at the Sorbonne, still remained fresh
in my mind. I further remember an episode most embarrassing,
I felt, for a young American girl. Knowing my admiration
for the General, I was laughingly admonished by the Chaigneaus
not to flirt with him when he came to dinner, to which I
tartly replied, "Of course not — I'd as soon
think of flirting with the Archangel Gabriel!" And
so it came about that for many years on the wall of my Manhattan
School office hung the picture of a strikingly attractive
man signed "Gabriel" — to the mystification
of all who saw. For of course my youthful remark had been
at once passed on to the person most concerned.
But among all the musicians, writers and artists
who held our admiration, there was Harold Bauer, who in
addition to his music, had a conversational gift, a wit,
and a contagious intellectual curiosity I have never seen
equaled.
Many years later he told me that after my
last Paris lesson with him when I was preparing to return
to New York, he asked me what I wanted to do, and I replied
that I wanted to start a school — I do not remember
this, but he said it was so.
And in the fall of 1917, the dream was coming
true. I had returned to New York, and I had acquired a certain
number of students from wealthy families so that my stay
in the city seemed assured. But also I had developed an
enormous interest in communities, the lives they encompassed,
in different racial groups, their problems and their adjustments
to our country.
Because of this interest I had taken time
to graduate from the New York School of Social Work (now
a graduate department of Columbia University) and so had
widened my knowledge along many lines. Was better housing
the answer? Were more playgrounds the solution? Was woman
suffrage the important point? I certainly tired myself out
marching in the parades. Surely the difficulties with which
my inner spirit was concerned faced both rich and poor alike.
Instinctively I knew that one could serve only through a
medium vital to one's self, and for me that medium was music.
One point was very clear to me. I would not insist on any
one exprecssion in this field of music; I would work when
and where and in what way opportunity came to me. I determined
to investigate. Why should children of means have music
and not all young people? I knew of no place where one could
find in those days a mixed racial community with musical
heritage except at a social settlement, so I went to Union
Settlement on East 104th Street. I took my meals at the
Settlement, but I lived with a friend in one of the old
brownstone houses on East 105th Street.
There I found that at the last census there
were 222,899 people living in that small district between
96th Street and 116th Street, and from Fifth Avenue to the
East River. More than half of this number were foreign born,
and 94.1 percent were of foreign origin. Italians, Poles
and Russians were taking the place of Irish and Germans
in that dramatic and kaleidoscopic shifting of national
groups which has always made the East Side of New York so
colorful and interesting.
But in all that district there was no place
where a musically gifted child, off-spring of those foreign
races so deeply imbued with music, was able to secure really
good instruction and, through music, realize a more complete
development. There were no radios in those days and no concerts
to which they could gain admission.
I asked those in charge at Union Settlement
if I might be allowed to give some music lessons. I persuaded
some of the Junior League girls who were on the Auxiliary
Board of the Settlement to help. The lessons started at
ten cents each, and it was a milestone when the price rose
to a quarter. Each week I met with the delightful and gifted
young "faculty" so that its members might keep
at least one lesson ahead of the pupils.
But the war had come and was absorbing the
nation. The families of our students were profoundly concerned
with the fate of their relatives in the Old World and were
touching in their appreciation of the strength and comfort
received from their renewed contact with the music which
we offered them, and which in their own countries had formerly
been such a part of their lives. Of course, music still
flourished for those who could afford to pay to hear it.
The Philharmonic, the Opera, the great solo recitals in
Carnegie Hall — but on East 104th Street it was the
ten cent lesson to which the families seemed to cling, and
the Community Sings, sometimes of a thousand people, on
the streets in the evening. And behind all this, as the
hard times increased, the long line of three or four hundred
applicants waiting for distribution of sacks of coal at
the Settlement.
Gradually my helpers on the junior Auxiliary
were drawn into war work. They presented me with one hundred
dollars and exhorted me not to let the School die.
I found myself with over one hundred eager
waiting students, a small and devoted group of teachers
who needed work - and no funds. And then came the decision
on the part of the Settlement that it could no longer give
me free rooms for the lessons. It seemed as if this were
destined to be the end, but in later years when almost insurmountable
difficulties confronted us, my memory went back to these
early years, and I realized that each situation can be met
effectively only on its own ground. For just because of
all the difficulties with which we were faced, the unifying
and enriching effects of the music seemed increasingly apparent.
And as the devotion of the parents and students grew, I
became ever more convinced that there must be in the cities
of modern America, schools of music for students of all
financial backgrounds, where people of all ages could come
together with their burdens and desires, and gain, through
their contact with music, a reappraisal of values in living.
It was a large order, but friends became
interested — and it was at this moment that the future
Manhattan School of Music was born…
[Advnenture in Music is a memoir written
by Janet D. Schenck and published by Manhattan School of Music
in 1961. It chronicles the development and growth of the School
from its beginnings in 1917 through 1960.]

Alumni
Memories
Felicity Dell’Aquila-Geyra
(undergraduate studies 1949-52) remembers: “I remember
. . . I remember . . . My trepidation each time I stepped
into the always dimly lit entrance to that beloved school
on East 105th Street. I remember sitting expectantly in the
little window-encased balcony, looking out in awe at the seemingly
magical worlds, the comings and goings of so many, many talented
people. And I remember waiting . . . waiting . . . for life
to begin. I remember Mrs. Schenck’s strict elegance
— the tailored suits, the ever-present triple strand
of pearls, the so-stern coiffure … These, and so many
more images of the unforgottable personalities who were Manhattan
School of Music to me, remain indelible in my memory; and
I am so thankful to them for their gifts. They gave me a love
of music and a special understanding of the meaning of the
words art and artist that have served me well. How right it
is to celebrate them and those wonderful days that once were.”
Dick Katz (BM ’50) remembers:
“The first vivid memory I have of MSM is taking the
entrance audition with Mrs. Schenck in her office: I dutifully
proceeded to play the required Bach invention, and had begun
a Mozart sonata when she said, 'Very nice, but I see here
on your application that your main interest is jazz. Play
me something.' I played a little of Gershwin’s 'The
Man I Love.' She smiled and said, 'You’ll be fine.'
In those days, for someone of Mrs. Schenck’s background
to be so tolerant of another musical language like jazz was
not only unique but prophetic. And I will be eternally grateful
for her understanding."
[SUBMIT
YOUR OWN MEMORIES OF MRS. SCHENCK]
[REGISTER
FOR THE OCTOBER 2008 REUNION]
Learn About Other Decades
Pre-1940’s
| 1940’s
| 1950’s
| 1960’s
| 1970’s
| 1980’s
| 1990’s
| 2000’s
AUTUMN IN NEW YORK
JOIN
US IS MORNINGSIDE HEIGHTS WHEN
COLORS ARE AT THEIR PEAK TO
CELEBRATE MANHATTAN SCHOOL OF MUSIC'S 90TH ANNIVERSARY.
“IT'S
GOOD TO LIVE IT AGAIN.”
— FROM
VERNON DUKE'S "AUTUMN IN NEW YORK"
|
|
 |
|