Pleasant Point One Room School

Off the Fast Track

One gets tired of the endless miles on Interstate 70 in western Kansas. This was once the land of the Lakota, Cheyenne, Kiowa, Arapaho, Osage, Kansa and other tribes who hunted buffalo.

Leaving the four lane highway at Hays, head south on US 183. It is a quiet peaceful drive where buffalo once roamed through rolling farmland. Wheat, sorghum, and corn are the usual crops. For a few short years, Texas cattle found their way to the Union Pacific railhead in Hays. The two lane highway takes you past tiny Schoenchen and Liebenthal to LaCrosse. The way leads on to nearby Rush Center and Great Bend.

If, as a child, you watched Gunsmoke, then you often heard Marshall Matt Dillon speak of taking a prisoner from Dodge to Hays. This is the route he would take. And Lt. Dunbar, Kevin Costner’s character in Dances with Wolves left Ft. Hays heading west to Ft. Sedgwick.

At LaCrosse stop at the Grass Park where the Rush County Historical Association maintains several historical buildings.

Pleasant Point one-room school #24, Rush County, Kansas

One Room School

Pleasant Point #24 one-room school opened in 1907 and closed in 1957. In 2015, it was moved from its very rural Union Township location 6½ miles south of Nekoma to La Crosse. There were once over 80 school districts in Rush County. In 1880, the population was 5,000. When small towns and family farms thrived the population peaked at 10,000. Today there are less than 3,000 people.

Rush County, Kansas

Cheney, Kansas

It is a one room school house. That we know.

Twelve students, six boys, six girls, ranging in age from seven to seventeen, well dressed, and one teacher, a man in a jacket and waist coat, no tie, name unknown. Not a fancy school house on the treeless plain. Indeed it was quiet simple, but well built. Taller than most, one door, three windows, facing east and west, I suppose, and a chimney for cold, cold winters.

It could be in Cheney, Kansas. Or near abouts. Oscar Sellon was the photographer. That we know. Oscar was born in Rice County, Minnesota, lived in Cheney, and died in January of 1900, at the age of 40. Buried in Cheney’s Pioneer Cemetery. Married, no children.

On an atlas, Cheney is found in far west Sedgwick County, in Morton Township.

It was near a town called Marshall, on the North Fork of the Ninnescah River. Marshall claimed to be flourishing village, with a flouring-mill on the east bank of the Ninnescah, built in 1879. J. A. Anderson bought the mill in 1881, improved it, produced seven children, one of whom was constable for Marshall. Marshall himself was in the railroad building business and therefore, could be said, to be responsible for Marshall’s demise.

As the village grew, it added two general stores, two blacksmith shops, two feed-stables, a broom-factory, a boarding-house and restaurant serving hot meals to those passing west.

In 1880, it boasted 281 souls.

Then, in August of 1883, came the Santa Fe Railroad, through Goddard and Garden Plains, heading west. And railroads being fickle, like the wind and the rain, it turned south of Marshall, and swept by the little town. For, in 1883, when William Cutler wrote the first history of Kansas, Cheney wasn’t there.

Thus, the new depot, south of Marshall, put Marshall out of business, and Cheney began.

In the early days, Cheney had five saloons. For the hard working railroad workers, we suppose, but they soon moved on. Then came the families, the churches and schools.

Today, Cheney is still there, located south of Highway 400, west of Garden Plains. Cheney website.

Cheney, Kansas, or near abouts, One Room School House

William Cutler’s History of the State of Kansas, 1883, Sedgwick County.

HIstorical Atlas of Sedgwick County, Kansas Atlas, 1882, Sedgwick County.

Ellet School, Latham

Latham, Kansas, in Union Township.

It was once a thriving town serving farmers and ranchers in Rock Creek Valley, a stop on the short route of the Winfield Southwestern Railroad (later, the St. Louis and San Francisco Railroad) that connected Beaumont to Winfield.

Today, the railroad tracks are gone but the town lingers on. The Latham Saloon provides weekend entertainment. On Sundays, one has a choice of two churches, Baptist and Methodist. Otherwise, it is a Rip-Van-Winkle kind of town.

Latham lies just north of Rock Creek in Union Township. Get there by heading east of Wichita and Augusta on US 400, before Beaumont go south on Stony Creek Road. Or head north from Cambridge in Cowley County.

Ellet School, Latham, Kansas

Ellet School

The Ellet School No. 42 was once located at the now defunct town of Bodark along with the post office. In 1885, the one room school and post office moved two miles east to newly built the railroad and Latham. The school is named for Civil War General General Alfred Ellet, or his son who settled on Rock Creek, in nearby Cowley County. (Walnut Valley Times, June 24, 1870.) The school is on Cherry Street just south of 200 Street. It is a typical white clapboard construction with three windows to each side and a single door in front. The school was begun in 1871, given the number 42 in Butler County, making it one of the earlier schools.

[Note. The present school is dated 1880 and numbered 7. It may be that this school is not the Bodark school but one from Clay Township. Kansas Trails, source.]

Latham 1885

What kind of town did Latham become? The first issue of the weekly Latham Journal in September 1885 extolled the beauty of the town nestled on a hillside alongside Cherry Creek Valley. The headline was a new grocery store for Latham to compete for business with C. H. Backus. Latham already had a hardware store, general store, and pharmacy all advertised for business. One could eat at the Star Restaurant two blocks west of the depot on Main Street and even find overnight accommodations.

Latham’s farmers and cattle ranchers fared will enough to build a high school. A faculty of three taught Latin and German, Science and Mathematics in addition to all the necessary skills. Here is a link to the Latham High School Yearbook of 1913.

Latham High School, 1913
The Annual Board of the Yearbook, The Pansy, 1913

Closing Kansas One Room Schools

“A little learning is not a dangerous thing to one who does not mistake it for a great deal.”

William Allen White (1868 – 1944)
Silkville One Room School, Franklin County

From Closed Schools in Kansas, 1942

In the midst of World War II, the state of Kansas conducted a survey of its school system. The survey noted that “Kansas (29th in population) ranks third highest among the states in the total number of school units (behind Illinois ans Missouri, ahead of Minnesota, New York, Wisconsin, and Nebraska) but third lowest in average enroll­ment per unit.”

Not surprising for a rural state with many small farms, but one that highly valued the education of its children.

There were many causes of the reduction in schools, particularly one room schools. These causes included: cost savings, the desire for graded schools, and the bus that replaced the horse or the student who in the early days walked to school. One must also be mindful of the consolidation of farming into larger holdings, greatly reducing the number of families with children in school districts.

The Kansas legislature which was aware of this depopulation provided the following encouragement to close smaller schools.

S. 1935> Sec. 72-701. It provides that if there are not enough children in a school district to warrant the holding of school, the district may discontinue its school for the year and make provision for sending the pupils to other districts.

Thus, the report observes, in 1941-1942,1,601 schools which were closed. Of these school closing few were one room schools meaning that parents continued to value education and schools were closed where it was practical to combine small schools into larger schools with better facilities, more grades, and more teachers. There was also a trend to separate schools into elementary and high schools.

Church supported schools played some part in all of this, but that is a question of cause and effect. Did parents send their children to church supported schools because of the declining quality of education, or did church supported schools depopulate state supported schools and the quality of education?

I am not sure of the value of such a report. Things take on a momentum of their own. Education is one of those things that matter to parents and communities. And parents almost always act to do what is in the best interests of their children.

Today, schools are larger and larger. But church supported schools and independent schools strive to provide a more personal experience, like the one room schools of old.

Malone School, Denmark

Malone School, Denmark, Lincoln County, Kansas, 1900

Denmark

It was settled in 1869 by Danish Lutherans. In 1886 the Union Pacific Railroad built a branch line called the Salina, Lincoln and Northwestern Railroad. Denmark was a stop along the route, roughly 6 miles west of Lincoln. The late 1890’s were drought years. Land that once sold for $20 an acre now sold for $10.00, but the image tell the tale that many stuck it out.

Lincoln County has ever been ambitious to excel in school matters. The first school taught in the county was at the house of Martin Hendrickson in 1868 by Marion Ivy. The second school was taught in 1869 by David G. Bacon in a dugout near the same place. The first public school was in District No. 2, at Monroe, by Mrs. Skinner, in 1870. The county now has seventy-eight school districts with good comfortable buildings, valued at $19,250. The school expenses for the year ending July 31, 1882 were $10,935. The county has 2,888 children of school age, 2,267 of which are enrolled, and 1,510 of which are in daily attendance. The average salary of male teachers is $25 per month, and females, $22.

William G. Cutler’s History of the State of Kansas, Lincoln County, 1883

Schoolmap, Lincoln County

Arvonia’s One Room School

Before the flooding of adjacent Melvern Lake, the tiny Welsh community of Arvonia could be found south of the Marais des Cygnes River and west of Coal Creek. It is 8 miles south of Osage City and 4 miles north of Lebo, another town settled by Welsh immigrants. The first school was taught in 1870, by Miss Anna Want, in Oscar Beck’s loghouse. The limestone schoolhouse still standing was built two years later. It was designed by John Haskell and built by James Rice. This was the only school for the small Welsh community until 1949, when the Arvonia was consolidated with nearby Lebo’s school district.

From the nomination for the National Historic Register:

“Arvonia School is located in the unincorporated village of Arvonia, Kansas, … four miles north of Lebo, in the southwest corner of Osage County. The east-facing building sits on a hill at the northwest corner of South Arvonia and West 325th Street and is surrounded by open prairie. Nearby buildings include the Calvinistic Methodist Church and Arvonia Township Hall. A second floor was removed early in its history because of structural concerns, but the building retains its original roof-line with cupola/bell tower, overhanging eaves with eave brackets, and historic scalloped shingle gable ornament. The window openings are extant, with stone sills and lintels. However, the openings are boarded over with large shutters because the historic sashes are missing.”

Arvonia was settled by John Mather Jones and Welsh followers in 1869. The town boasted a sawmill, a flour mill on the river, a general store, cheese factory, the Temporary Hotel, later Dooley Hotel, which went up in smoke in the 1880s, a blacksmith shop, and two churches, the still extant church and the Union Church, whose meetings were held in the hotel. Coal was mined nearby that fueled the Santa Fe Railroad.

Arvonia lost out on the early battle to secure the railroad which went to Lebo and Osage City instead.

Follow Arvonia’s Facebook

Merry Christmas

2021 marks 50 years since John Lennon and Yoko Ono released So This Is Christmas. It has also been 90 years since the popular Dick and Jane series of books began, the ones I remember, the ones that taught us all to read. What have we learned?

So this is Christmas
And what have you done
Another year over
A new one just begun

I hope that you will listen to all the words. They are easy to find, you only have to look and listen.

So this is Christmas, what did we find, another year over, what have we learned? That it is good to be noble, it is better to be kind, through good times and bad times, through all kinds of weather, let’s stay together, friends til the end.

First School, Bazaar, Kansas

Professor D. A. Ellsworth abstracted the history of Chase County from the Chase County Leader News, a collection of unbound newspapers rescued from a garage. Ellsworth’s notes are preserved online by the Chase County Historical Society.

The reports are personal: a marriage, a birth, an arrest, a settler arriving, an untimely death. The reports are interesting: in 1860, the swarm of grasshoppers that arrived, the buffalo that crossed the prairie, gunfights, Texas Longhorns passing through, the injury of Dr. Lacy at the Falls, “while drying gun powder in the stove,” a disappearance or two. The news is national: the Civil War, the death of Abraham Lincoln, elections.

January 7, 1860

Included in the “news” on this day is Ann Yeager’s debut as the first teacher in Bazaar, Kansas. The school is No. 7 in Chase County. Nine years later, on Valentine’s Day, 1869, the Leader reports the marriage of Ann Yeager and Lucius Manley.

Three months earlier, Ann left Indiana and the Wabash River, to accompany her brother George to Bazaar. George had visited Kansas in 1858 and likely was returning as the Osage Indian Lands had been opened to settlement. He farmed along Rock Creek a mile or so west of Bazaar on land that once belonged to the Kaw Indians, for which he would have paid $1.25 an acre. Yeagher Creek flows on the north side of his property.

Grace Hays Blackburn, who grew up in Chase County when the Indians were still there, recalled the first schoolhouse, but whether she or her two brothers, Charley and Dick Hays, went or not we don’t know:

“[The first schoolhouse] was constructed of log slabs, the rough bark on the outside with the smooth sides forming the inside walls. Slabs were used also for benches with wooden pegs for legs.”

Maybe like this log cabin near Cambridge, Kansas

The log building would be replaced by a stone building in 1871, and that by the schoolhouse that now stands beside the highway.

Prairie Press, originally from Chase County Historical Sketches, Vol. II, published by the Chase County Historical Society in 1948.

1859

Two months earlier, the paper reported a fierce cold wind and snow. Gold Seekers at Pike’s Peak were returning home. The county board of supervisors ordered the construction of roads. In the June elections for the Wyandotte Convention, the Kansas Press reported that the Bazaar Township should cast 40 votes. The November elections were solidly Republican. On May 30th, The Kansas Press, Volume I, Number 1, was printed at Cottonwood Falls, Samuel N. Wood, editor. His home and his hay crop would be burned that fall.

In the national news, John Brown was arrested at Harpers Ferry.

In February of 1859, Chase County was organized.

What about Ann Yeager

George Yeagher’s life is well documented. He married a girl on a nearby farm, raised a family, lived to the ripe old age of 81. But what of his sister Ann? How long she taught, how many children she had, what became of Ann Yeager is not known. Did she marry and move to nearby Matfield Green or Cottonwood Falls?

Sources

Chase County Plat Book

Find a Grave George W. Yeager

Prairie Press

Abbie Bright, Schoolteacher

It was 1870, when the cattle drives still headed north out of Texas, fording the Ninnescah River on their way to Wichita. Buffalo still roamed the Kansas plains. The Osage Trust Lands were opened for settlement.

Philip Bright, an enterprising former Union soldier from Pennsylvania, took up a homestead claim straddling the Ninnescah River one mile west of present-day Clearwater in Sedgwick County. There he built a dugout and kept a diary.

Philip’s sister Abbie came to see Philip and his family, after first visiting her brother Hiram in Indiana. While there, she acquired 160 acres as an investment. She too kept a diary.

Abbie taught school. She does not give much of a description other than to say that it was at the cross-section of two roads, which was not uncommon for most one room schoolhouses. Judging by the early date, it is likely that it was No. 33 in Section 26 and not the later NO. 92 in Section 28.

one-room-school

One Room School, Kansas Memory

She was paid the handsome sum of $40 a month with $2 for room and board. School commenced in October after the fall harvest and was for a period of 4 months. Like many schools, it stood at a a lonely crossroads, a simple wooden structure with a single door and three windows on each length of the building. When time and money allowed, a steeple with a bell was built. Abbie’s schoolhouse probably had none. As the winter was approaching, someone dumped a pile of soft coal before the schoolhouse to heat the single black stove.

She began her term with 11 students, noting that more would join the group once the corn was harvested. She counted among her students “waifs” who had been sent from the east to be adopted by local families.

In 1873, Abbie married William M. Achenbach, a school teacher and farmer. The couple lived in Tama County, Iowa near Gladbrook. They had three daughters.

abbie bright

Abbie Bright

[Note. Some grammatical and spelling changes, a few additions. The diary can be found online, Kansas Historical Society]

Dec. 19. Did not get home Friday. So no mail for over a week.

The boys went to town, and I sent letters along to be mailed. No one seems anxious for the mail but I.

Last Saturday was my twenty-second birthday.

Age creeps on, but I fear it does not bring the expected wisdom with it. Last Saturday, I spent the day sewing and answering letters. The other week when I was up home, I made of a black and green wool goods, a suit for little Oakley, and he is to wear it when he has his picture taken.

This is a snowy Monday. There are but six scholars at school.

Dec. 20. Yesterday p.m. Mr. Woods came for his children, and I had a sled ride home. Coleman Butler brought us all up this morning. The sleighing is good. It is so cold it will last some time.

We are all invited to a party to night. Bess [Belle Butler] and I would rather stay home but to please the boys I expect we will go.

Dec. 21. We went to the party last night. James Hunter came around this way for us. There were seven in the sled, and we had a merry time. More boys there, as usually at their merry makings, than girls–and I danced until my ankles hurt. I do not like to refuse any one.

Some lack polish, but they are mostly well-meaning, up right boys. There are to be several other parties soon, but I shan’t go. I feel too stupid next day. It is very cold–only six scholars to day.

Dec. 23. I shall leave school out early today and go home. I’ll have a cold ride, but am so anxious for mail. There was a party last night, but I would not go.

This morning I ate breakfast standing by the cookstove, and started to school when some were still in bed. I like to have the room good and warm when the children come. Have a good stove and plenty of coal. The kitchen is a leanto, and cold. This morning I washed at one end, and by the time I wiped my face, and walked to the other end to comb, my hair was frozen. I am glad my hair is shingled [often short and curled, in Abbie’s case long, popular during the Civil War], it don’t take much combing, and another cold morning I will not wet it.

Dec. 28, 1870. Christmas is past. I spent it at my brother’s home with the children, and a plenty of apples, nuts, popcorn, homemade candy and cider. I had a pleasant time.

It was so cold Mrs. Bee did not want me to come up Friday, but I was determined to go.

She gave me a pair of drawers to wear, that were made out of a blanket, and they kept me warm, except my feet, which were frost bitten a little. If women rode crosswise like men, how much warmer and better it would be.

Kit seemed to like the outing, and traveled well.

There was no school Monday. I came down by way of Fees Hall in the p.m. When I turned the corner there, a team came up behind me to pass, but Kit would not let them pass. She started to run, and run she did for three miles, with the team close behind us. A little way from Mrs. Bees they turned off, and Kit slacked up.

That was the fasted riding I ever did.

They say Kit never lets a team pass her.

Jan. 2, 1871

Did not go home last Friday as I had school Sat\urday to make up for Monday. Went to church at Grows Grove yesterday.

When we came back Mr. De Terk was here. He gave me a pair of kid-lined gloves, with fur at the wrists, very nice. They are a philopena forfeit. [As philopena is game in which a person, on finding a double-kernelled almond or nut, may offer the second kernel to another person and demand a playful forfeit from that person to be paid on their next meeting.] There is a sort of craze, playing philopena around here.

The snow is gone and so is the sleighing. One evening last week we spent at Moffit’s home. Their little girls come to school.

Lower Fox Schoolhouse

I often find myself coming back to the simple but beautifully built stone schoolhouse, officially known as school No. 14, but popularly called Lower Fox Schoolhouse for the nearby creek.

It is quiet and peaceful there, I am often alone, and my thoughts turn to the school children who went there and their parents who came to Chase County to start a new life.

What did they think?

[It is hard to know what those school children thought, but here is an excerpt from a diary of one such teenager in an unknown school. Funnie Place, No Fences, Teenagers’ Views of Kansas, circa 1870, edited by C. Robert Haywood and Sandra Jarvis. Misspellings and punctuation as written.]

“I am sitting in school writing this letter I Just looked back of me and
one of the girls was laid stretched out, their full length in their seats, it is
now just 12 oclock & I am terriably hungry, I allway bring my dinner to
school and have gay times, talking first about this fellow and then that
one.

Mr. Lee came in the room one day last week, Just at noon, and
pretended to be reading all the time when school was called he began
lecturing us about our conversation, during noons resesses, &c. He said if
one should pretend listening to our conversation, they wold hear nothing
but Tom, Dick, & Harry. Hasant Tom exquisite manner’s? and Dick? what
a handsome form. Our examination comes off in about three weeks.”

The Lower Fox Schoolhouse

fox-school-cupola_date2

Construction began in 1882, but the first school term began on September 1, 1884, with Dora Peer as the teacher. Male school teachers in Chase County in 1884 received a generous $44.37 per month, women got $35.85 (generous because many other counties paid less). Chase County organized 46 school districts for a total school population of 2,532.

[Biennial Report – Kansas State Board of Agriculture, Volume 4, pages 50-55.]

The native Kansas limestone for the school came from Barney Lantry’s quarry, just north of Strong City, KS and David Rettiger did the stone work. David Rettiger was the same contractor on Jones’ Spring Hill Ranch house as well as several buildings in Strong City.

Virtual Tour

lower-fox-schoolhouse-1

Lower Fox Schoolhouse

Chase County 1884

[Chase County Leader News, Professor D A Ellsworth’s Abstracts]

The local and national news was printed in the Chase County Leader. Chase County is heavily Republican, and many of its farmers and cattlemen former Union soldiers, there are at least six county Grange organizations. The severe drought of 1874 is now a distant memory, as well as the locust infestation and the many prairie fires brought  under control by the county roads that act as fire breaks. In 1871, the Santa Fe Railroad arrived in Chase County, bypassing Cottonwood Falls thereby creating Strong City. Justice is dispensed from the Chase County Courthouse in Cottonwood Falls, built in 1873.

All the news that is fit to print and then some

In March, The cattlemen of Chase county organize an association with Dr. Jonas McCaskill as president; J. C. Scroggins, secretary, and W. P. Martin, treasurer.

An Uncle Tom’s Cabin company plays in Cottonwood Falls. The little girl playing the part of Little Eva is taken ill during the evening and dies the following day. Little Miss Lula Heck played the part of Little Eva.

Cyrus G. Allen, who came to Chase county in 1857, sells his farm on Middle Creek to Wm. Thurston, and to go farther west.

May 30 –The first formal observation of Memorial Day is held. Thirteen soldiers have been buried in Prairie Grove cemetery.

In June, the population of the county is recorded as 5,763.

That summer, the Chase County teachers recommend a list of text books to the school district.

For the fall term at Cottonwood Falls, L. A. Lowther, of West Virginia, is employed as principal. Adeline Rogler and Cora Billingslea are the grade teachers. Dora Peer is the sole teacher at the Lower Fox School.

In October, 100 head of cattle die on Middle Creek from Spanish Fever.

In November, Dennis Rettiger dies at Strong City.

In the presidential election, Chase county gives Republican candidate James G. Blaine of Maine a majority of 177, but Blaine loses to the Democrat, Grover Cleveland.

1901 Chase County Map

The years would not change Chase County much. The schoolhouse is north of Strong City by 2 miles, just west of the creek. If you are coming from Wichita, take scenic Highway 177. The highway takes you to the Tall Grass Prairie Preserve next to the school.

chase-county-detail