Frederick C. Henderschott

[2] Henderschott attended the public school of his native community, and went to work in the lumber camps of the northern country at the age of eleven.

At the age of seventeen, in 1887, he joined a country newspaper business in the Dakota Territory, which he leased and managed from 1888 to 1891.

Henderschott died at home in Pelham, New York in Westchester County on March 30, 1934 from the effects of stroke suffered a year earlier.

[5] In 1913 Henderschott, at the time educational director of the New York Edison Company,[12][13] explained about the origin of The National Association of Corporation Schools, founded earlier that year.

He explained: And furthermore: The National Association of Corporation Schools eventually came to life at a convention was held at New York University on January 24, 1913, at which a constitution was adopted, officers were elected and provision made for the appointment of working committees.

Frederick C. Henderschott, 1917