The principal at the Connecticut elementary school where a gunman opened
fire in a rampage Friday, killing 26 people including 20 children and
then himself, was identified as one of the victims.
A well-liked and experienced administrator, Dawn Hochsprung was among
those gunned down at Sandy Hook Elementary where she had been principal
since 2010, said Gerald Stomski, the first selectman of nearby Woodbury.
He said police told him of her death.
Hochsprung was a principal in Woodbury schools before taking the job in
Newtown, Stomski said. He said people throughout town were mourning her
death.
"She had an extremely likable style about her," Stomski said. "She was an extremely charismatic principal while she was here."
She frequently tweeted photos from her job and wrote upbeat tweets about
what was going on at the school. Four days before she died, she posted a
photo of two kindergarten girls paying for groceries over a toy cash
register in a classroom. She called them "kinders" and saw them as "74
new opportunities to inspire lifelong learning!"
More hauntingly, she wrote a letter before the school year outlining new
safety measures including locked doors during school hours, several
publications reported, and tweeted a photo of students who'd been
evacuated from the building during a safety drill earlier in the school
year.
"I don't think you could find a more positive place to bring students to
every day," she told The Newtown Bee newspaper in 2010 in a story about
the hiring of new administrators in the district. She had worked for 12
years as an administrator before coming to Sandy Hook, including six
years in nearby Danbury, the newspaper reported.
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