After Shuangxi Academy was built, it accepted students and students, and the government allocated academic land as the academy property. Local people also donated money to buy land for the academy. Therefore, Shuangxi Academy once owned more than 200 acres of land. Su Ruishu, the grandson of King Su Yan, and others also donated money to purchase real estate and give it to the academy. At the end of the Qing Dynasty, Shuangxi Academy owned 14 properties including Tongyu House, Ximen Nei, and Reading Alley. Income from land and real estate is used as college funding. Starting from the thirty-sixth year of Qianlong's reign (1771), tuition fees and reward money were also paid to those with excellent monthly examination scores. During the Guangxu period (1875-1908), students often studied at Shuangxi Academy, and more than 250 students took the exams.
Those who taught at Shuangxi Academy with great success include: Yongzheng Yimao (1735), Sui Gongzhuang Tianneng (a member of society), Jiaqing Xinyou (1801) Juren Ye Lan (Qingmu Yiren) , in the first year of Daoguang (1821), the candidates were Ye Yifei (from Gukeng), Renzi of Xianfeng (1852), Chen Tengkun (from Songtian in Guanghuali), Weiwei (1859), Chen Ruilin (from Hucuozhai), Tongzhi Gengwu (1870) ) Juren Ye Wangrui (from Meiqishan). The last mountain chief was Wu Huangshu (a native of the north gate of the county) who was elected during the Sino-Japanese War of Guangxu (1894).
In the 30th year of the reign of Emperor Guangxu of the Qing Dynasty (1904), Shuangxi Academy was converted into a school. Wu Huangshu, the former dean of the academy (also named Jiongtang, a native of Beimen, and a member of the Guangxu Jiawu Judicial Committee) was appointed as the dean. Thirty-three years (1907). Wu resigned, but still presided over the design and reconstruction of a new classroom for the backward college. However, since then, warlords have been fighting, local unrest, principals and teachers have changed frequently, the school has been in and out of operation, and it has not produced a single graduate in ten years.
In 1912, the county governor Ma Zhengxiang (from Zhao'an) reorganized the "County School" and appointed his fellow villager Lin Xuezhu (also known as Shaoting, who graduated from the Fujian Normal School with a bachelor's degree) as the former Zhao'an school. Anxian Encouraging Director) is the principal. Since then, Lin Xuezhu has been re-elected for eight years, and the school has become relatively stable. The first class of high school graduates began in the summer of 1919. Professor Wang Xiunan, chairman of the Southeast Asian Education Research Center in Singapore, is one of the first graduates.
In 1921, Hong Guoqi, a former member of the Qing Dynasty, became the principal. Landlord gentleman Su Wanling and others went to Shanghai to raise more than 4,200 yuan to expand classrooms and dormitories.
In 1922, Hong Guoqi’s son, Hong Shaoxun, who graduated from the Provincial Normal School, served as director of the Tongan County Encouraging School and principal of Jimei Primary School, was appointed as the principal. At that time, the school had 180 students in the fourth grade of national (junior primary school), 25 in the first grade of senior primary school, 12 in the third grade of senior primary school, and 6 classes with 217 students. In addition to the funds allocated by the county treasury, it also owns the original Shuangxi Academy property, including 14 properties in Tongyu House, Ximen Nei, Reading Alley and other places.
In 1924, the school name was changed to County Shuangxi Primary School. In 1930, he built a three-room red brick classroom and also built a rain-covered playground. There are 12 classes with nearly 500 students. In 1931, Wu Huansan was appointed president, and Cai Qirui, an academician of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, a famous professor, and the vice president of Xiamen University, taught at the school.
At the beginning of 1935, Tongan County began to implement the central primary school district system. The school is the "Tong'an County No. 1 Central Primary School", and Chen Hancheng is the principal. In September of the following year, Ximochi Primary School was merged and the original school site was used as a branch. There are 13 classes in the school, with 492 students and 16 teachers. The county treasury allocates 8,160 yuan annually. In February 1937, Ximochi Primary School was established as an independent school.
In 1940, it was renamed Chengxiang Central School. In 1942, Ximochi Primary School was merged again, and in 1944 it was separated out. The name of the main school was changed to Datong Northeast Central National School. In 1947, it was renamed Datong No. 1 Central Primary School. From then until 1949, the underground Communist Party organization carried out revolutionary activities in the school. Teacher Yang Yiban is a member of the Communist Party. Principal Ye Yushu, teachers Ye Wenxing and Ye Wenbang also participated in the revolutionary activities under the leadership.
Tongan County was liberated on September 19, 1949. At the end of September, 11 teachers went to the school to clean up the environment and find students to rehearse the program. On October 1, the People's Republic of China was founded, and the school held programs on the streets. Classes officially resumed in October, with 8 classes and 252 students returning to school.
In early 1950, it was renamed Shuangxi Complete Primary School, with Ye Yushu still serving as the principal. In the autumn of 1950, Ye Yushu was promoted from Jiang Gao to principal due to studying at the Jinjiang Special Administrative Primary School.
In the autumn of 1951, it was renamed Shuangxi Central Primary School, with Gao Jiangshan as the principal.
In the autumn of 1952, Gao Jiangshan entered university for further studies, and the dean of students, Guo Chaoqing, acted as school administrator. As the number of students increased, 4 new bungalow classrooms were built on both sides of the school.
In 1953, Yang Qingbai became the principal. The county established a primary school teaching and research office, which also operates in the school. Due to the increase in students, two fourth-grade classes moved to the Mishi Building for classes.
In the autumn of 1954, the school became the "Tongxian Experimental Primary School". The teaching scope includes senior students in Chengguan Town (except Xixi Street) and Yuekou, Wujia and Dingxitou. There are 21 classes in the school, nearly 1,000 students, and nearly 50 faculty and staff.
In 1956, Ye Yinjun was appointed as the principal. In September 1956, the campus was hit by a flood and the wall collapsed. After the disaster, Central Water Resources Minister Fu Zuoyi and Provincial Water Resources Director Cao Yukun inspected the school and allocated 30,000 yuan to build two 8-room stone and wood structure classrooms. In 1957, the county allocated 18,000 yuan to build six classrooms with brick and wood structures, and the Mishilou branch was cancelled.
In 1958, Wu Guangshan became the principal.
The school implements the policy of integrating education with production and labor. Wujia Village and Chaoyuan Village have set aside more than six acres of paddy fields as "student-agricultural bases." There is also a livestock farm and a woodworking shop on campus. In the same year, during the "Big Steel Training", the school selected 72 older students from the senior grades to form the "Red Scarf Expedition Team", led by five teachers, and went to Shanji Mountain in Tingxi to burn charcoal. After 45 days, more than 1,000 kilograms of carbon were burned. (In 1962, the paddy fields were returned to the original village and the livestock farm was dissolved.)
In September 1960, Xiamen Normal University moved to Tong'an. The school was renamed "Xiamen Normal University Affiliated Primary School" and was under the leadership of Xiamen Normal University. The experimental primary school was taken over by Dongshan Primary School. The school has grown to 28 classes and 60 faculty members. In 1962, Hong Shanling took over as principal.
In 1963, the scale of Xiamen Normal University was reduced, and the affiliated primary school also selected one class from each year group to attend classes in a newly built simple classroom outside the north gate (today's No. 1 Middle School in the West) as a branch branch. In June 1964, the branch was renamed the Xiamen Normal Affiliated Primary School, and the main school was renamed Chengguan Central Primary School, with Chen Shunchao as the principal.
In March 1969, the "cleaning up of the class ranks" of teachers came to an end, and a considerable number of key teachers were transferred to teach in mountainous primary schools. The remaining teachers and school personnel were also deployed to various streets to run schools. The school sites include: the former school building outside the north gate of Xiamen Normal University Affiliated Primary School, the Su Ancestral Hall in Ximochi, the former County Party Committee Party School inside the south gate, and the former Finance and Trade Cadre School by the stream. Only students from Dongxi Street remained at the original site of Shuangxi Academy, and the school's name was changed to Donghong Primary School. After one semester, students outside the North Gate and inside the South Gate were merged into Donghong Primary School due to unsuitable school buildings.
On December 26, 1971, Tongan Food Factory occupied the school building with the consent of the "Left Support" troops, and the primary school moved to the former Confucius Temple Building of No. 1 Middle School, and the school was named "Xiangyang Primary School". By 1973, the school had grown to 21 classes, thousands of students, and more than 100 faculty members. Jiang Yanzhao, Ye Jinzan, Lin Shuijin and others took charge of the school one after another. Ye Jinzan passed away in 1973. At this time, the leadership team was not united and the teachers were divided into two factions. In 1975, the county sent a working group to the school to rectify it.
In February 1976, members of the original leadership team were transferred, and Ye Jinqiang, a member of the county-appointed working group, stayed at the school to preside over the work. Since then, both parties have continued to strengthen the leadership team and enrich the teaching team. The school's work has gradually gotten on the right track and regained its vitality.
The experimental primary school was reopened in February 1979. The county government appointed Ye Jinqiang as the principal and party branch secretary. At this time, the school had 29 classes, 1,500 students, and 75 faculty members. That year, the county allocated 101,400 yuan to build a teachers' dormitory building with a total construction area of ??1,259.67 square meters. In 1986, another 410,000 yuan was invested to build 4 teaching buildings with an area of ????2,421 square meters, with 32 classrooms and 8 grade offices. In April of the same year, it was designated as a provincial key primary school.
In October 1981, Zhuang Gongbing took over as the principal and enriched the leadership team. The school gradually expanded to 29 classes, more than 1,500 students, and 75 faculty and staff. In 1988, the Young Pioneers were named the National Red Flag Brigade. Ye Jinqiang retired in December 1988. In September 1989, the county appointed Zhuang Gongbing as concurrent party branch secretary.
In September 1990, Lu Qiubao took over as the principal, and the school continued to develop. In May 1990, a new comprehensive building was renovated with an area of ??1,523 square meters, and the school's operating conditions were improved. This year, Vice Governor Liu Jinmei, who attended the provincial fund-raising meeting for running schools, the Director of the Department of Planning and Finance of the National Education Commission, and leaders of the Provincial Education Commission came to inspect the school one after another. In November 1992, the school was named a civilized unit by the municipal government. In February 1994, it was awarded the title of provincial civilized school by the Propaganda Department of the Provincial Party Committee and the Provincial Education Commission. In March 1996, it was confirmed by the Provincial Education Commission as one of the first batch of provincial model primary schools.
In August 1997, Chen Rongyi was appointed as the principal. In August 1999, Tong'an Experimental Primary School was renamed Tong'an No. 1 Experimental Primary School, and Chen Rongyi succeeded as the principal. The school has expanded to 32 or 33 classes, with more than 1,760 students and 90 on-the-job teachers. 60% of the teachers have a college degree or above, 2 are special-grade teachers, 2 are provincial and municipal subject leaders, 2 are from primary, secondary and high schools, and 35 are senior primary school teachers. The school's various special classrooms are fully equipped, the teaching equipment reaches first-class standards, a closed-circuit television network has been established, and the average number of books per student is 22. The school has always aimed at cultivating high-quality future people, and has simultaneously developed the five educations. It has basically formed the school-running characteristics of "using beauty to support morals, using beauty to educate the mind, using beauty to strengthen the body, and using beauty to create beauty". He has successively conducted research on topics such as "The Art of Primary School Chinese Classroom Teaching", "Trial Teaching", and "Guidance - Independent Learning" and achieved remarkable results. It is the national experimental base for "New Curriculum and Learning Style Transformation", "Audio-visual Teaching", and "Sports Development Research", and is an experimental point for curriculum reform in provinces, cities and districts.
In August 2002, Chen Meiling, an overseas Chinese in the school’s former teachers’ dormitory, donated money to build a Fuhua Building with a total construction area of ??3,200 square meters. The school’s operating conditions were further improved, and the school flourished and prospered. , enjoys a high reputation inside and outside the province.