User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
schoolhouses- Plural of schoolhouse
Extensive Definition
One-room schools were commonplace throughout
rural portions of various
countries including
the United
States, Canada, Australia,
New
Zealand, United
Kingdom and Ireland in the late
19th
and early 20th
centuries. In most rural (country) and small town schools, all of the students met in a single room.
There, a single teacher
taught academic basics to five to eight grade levels of elementary-age
boys and girls. While in many areas one-room schools are no longer
used, it is not uncommon for them to remain in developing
nations and rural areas, such as much of the Faulklands
and Shetlands.
History
United States
The quality of facilities at one-room schools varied with local economic conditions, but generally, the number of children at each grade level would vary with local populations. Most buildings were of simple frame construction, some with the school bell on a cupola. In Midwestern states, sod construction was also used, as well as stone in areas such as portions of the southwest where trees were scarce. In some locations, the schoolhouse was painted red, but most seem to have been white.Mission Ridge School was one of the early schools
built in
Mason County, West Virginia. It has been moved to the West
Virginia State Farm Museum complex near
Point Pleasant. Examination of the materials in this building
indicates that boards and timbers were hand-sawed and also
hand-planed. Square nails were used throughout the building. Except
for the roof and a few boards in the floor, all of the material in
this building is original. The blackboard really is a black
board, made of wide boards painted black. It was not until much
later that slate was used for chalkboards, although students often
had individual slates for writing practice.
Teachers in
one-room schools were often former students themselves. Their role
is well-described by a student from Kentucky in the
1940s: "The
teachers that taught in the one room, rural schools were very
special people. During the winter months they would get to the
school early to get a fire started in the potbelly
stove, so the building would be warm for the students. On many
occasions they would prepare a hot, noon meal on top of the stove,
usually consisting of soup or stew of some kind. They took care of
their students like a new mother hen would care for her newly
hatched chicks; always looking out for their health and
welfare."
A typical school day was 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., with a
morning and an afternoon recess of 15 minutes each and an
hour period for lunch. "The older students were given the
responsibility of bringing in water, carrying in coal or wood for
the stove. The younger students would be given responsibilities
according to their size and gender such as cleaning the black board
(chalkboard), taking the erasers outside for dusting plus other
duties that they were capable of doing."http://www.snowkentucky.com/one_room_school.htm
Transportation for children who lived too far to
walk was often provided by horse-drawn kid hack or
sulky, which could only
travel a limited distance in a reasonable amount of time each
morning and evening, or students might ride a horse, these being put out to
pasture in an adjoining paddock during the day. In more recent
times, students rode bicycles.
The school house was the center and focus for
thousands of rural communities, hamlets and small towns. Often,
town meetings and picnics were also held there.
The vast majority of one-room schools in the
United States are no longer used as schools and have either been
torn down or converted for other purposes. However, in some rural
communities, including among the Amish, one-room or
two-room schools are still used, primarily for elementary
education, with students graduating to local or regional middle
and high schools.
Iron Hill School #112C
The Iron Hill School #112C, now the Iron Hill
Museum, is in Newark, Delaware and is an example of a one-room
schoolhouse constructed for African-American students during the
days of segregation. The school, constructed in 1923, was one of 89
funded by Pierre S. duPont for black students in Delaware. DuPont's
philanthropy project was aimed at improving the educational
situation of blacks in Delaware at the neglect of the State
Legislature. DuPont also funded construction and improvements for
white schools. All of the DuPont-funded schools were designed by
the Newark, New Jersey architectural firm of Guilbert
& Betelle.
The Iron Hill School is currently being utilized
as a natural history museum, but plans to construct a new museum
adjacent to the site include future interpretation of the school
building to commemorate the history of the school and the
community. An oral history project has recorded nearly 40 hours of
interviews that capture the history from 1923 till its closing in
the early 1960's.
Ireland
In Ireland, free primary education was mandated in 1831, prompting the establishment of many single-teacher National Schools across rural areas, most initially using a room in an existing building. By the 1850s there was a school in every parish. Most extant one- and two-room school buildings date from the decades after 1891 when primary education became compulsory. Most of those still in use today have been extended following merger with neighbouring schools. Since 2002, any state-funded school with at least 10 pupils is entitled to at least 2 teachers; the 21 schools which fell below this threshold are located on offshore islands http://www.education.ie/home/home.jsp?pcategory=17241&ecategory=17241&language=EN. In recent decades, an increasing number of schools have been founded for parents not content with the National School system. These include Gaelscoileanna (which teach through Irish rather than English) and multi-denominational schools (most Irish schools are controlled by one or other of the main Christian churches). Although such schools eventually become eligible for state funding, they usually begin with a single teacher in a room or prefabricated building.Teacher's residence
The teacher's residence, or teacherage, was often
attached to the school, or very close by, so that a male teacher's
wife and family were an integral part of the management and support
system for the school. Single, female teachers were more often
billeted or boarded with a local family to provide for social norms
requiring social supervision of single females.
Canada
Many one roomed schools also served as the local
chapel on Sundays, and evening/Saturday meeting places for local
people and activities. Being mostly rural, many schools had no
water or sanitation and this was often provided by converting wells
into toilets (a plank with a hole in it), melting snow for water in
the winter and relying on the help of nearby farms in the summer.
In the 1950's a milk truck would sometimes come in the summer weeks
and offer Strawberry, Chocolate and Plain milk.
Teaching standards were often variable from
school to school with the teacher having to coach children of all
ages/grades within one room. This sometimes meant that younger
grades were left "out of their depth" while higher grades were
being taught. Being distracted the younger ones often listened to
and became aware of concepts and teaching that, normally, they
would not encounter for some years. This has sometimes been
presented as being one cause of the "precotious" period of the
early 60's.
Consolidation
Motorized school buses
in the 1920s made longer distances possible, and one-room schools
were soon consolidated in most portions of the United States into
multiple classroom schools where classes could be held separately
for various grade levels. Gradually, one-room school houses were
replaced. Most one-room schools had been replaced by larger schools
by World War
II except in the most rural areas.
However, they are still common in rural parts of
Australia. Megalong
Public School is a good example of a one-room school.
Preservation: buildings and cultural
In Calvert
County, Maryland, Port Republic School Number 7 closed its
doors in 1932 and sat unused for over 40 years. Then, in 1976 the
Calvert Retired Teachers Association, looking for a Bicentennial
Year project, decided to restore the one-room schoolhouse. On July
24, 1977, after months of hard work by teachers and community
volunteers, the old school bell rang out once more, and the little
one-room school house, filled with its memories and memorabilia,
was ready for visitors. http://calvert-county.com/school.htm
It is now one of the county's tourist attractions. A similar
project was done in
Queen Anne's County, Maryland by retired Teachers and Community
Volunteers. The restored schoolhouse is located in front of
Queen Anne's County High School
In Iowa, over 125 small
one-room school houses have been turned into local museums. The
buildings in some places found new purpose as homes.
The One Room School House Project of
Southwestern College in Winfield,
Kansas, includes listings and information on some 880 schools
throughout the state and nation. The information, pictures, and
stories included in this site have been collected and sent to the
project by researchers and historians from across America.
Famous students of one-room schools
- Robert Gordon Menzies, the longest-serving Prime Minister of Australia - school at Jeparit, Victoria
- Laura Ingalls Wilder, who later dramatised her experience in Little House on the Prairie and other children's novels.
- Joyce Carol Oates, the Pulitzer-prize-winning writer, attended a one-room schoolhouse in upstate New York.
- Alan B. Shepard, Jr., the first American in space and one of only twelve astronauts to have walked on the moon, attended a one-room schoolhouse in East Derry, New Hampshire.
- Hazel Miner, who froze to death in a spring blizzard in Center, North Dakota in March 1920, but saved her younger brother and sister by covering them with her own body.
- Jimmy Wales, Wikipedia founder.
- Herbert Hoover, President.
External links
- CSAA a National One-Room Schoolhouse Support Organization
- Berkshire County Massachusetts (Lanesborough), Preserved One-room Schoolhouse on Mt. Greylock
- Calvert County Maryland, Preserved One-room Schoolhouse
- One Room School House Project of Southwestern College
- Kentucky One-room School
- Historic Mission Ridge One-room School
- University of Northern Iowa - One-room School Museum
- Iron Hill School: An African-American One-Room School, a National Park Service Teaching with Historic Places (TwHP) lesson plan
- Former Mt. Lonarch school, Victoria, Australia.
- America's One-Room Schoolhouses
schoolhouses in German: Zwergschule
schoolhouses in Chinese: 單室學校