Fall – School
Country grade schools were located so most of the farm children didn’t have to walk or ride more than two miles to school. High schools were often in town. In the country schools, there was no electricity, and the only heat came from a stove. Students walked, rode their ponies or biked to school. Kenneth Jackson remembers riding his pony to school.
“Used to ride them to country school and even rode them to high school some… When I went to high school I went to McCool, which was six miles from home. Rode the Shetland pony there quite a few times; sometimes when it was 10 below zero… My grandfather lived in McCool, and he had a barn… So we kept our ponies in the barn there during the daytime. That was the trouble with country schools, it got cold … there wasn’t any place you could put the pony in out of the bad weather, so we had to walk when it was cold and stormy.” — Kenneth Jackson (Quicktime required)
What’s for lunch?
Blackboard Slogans
Here are some sayings the teacher would write on the blackboard in the front of a 1920s country school in York. Read these sayings and then make up your own:
“A thing done right today means no trouble tomorrow.”
“Words spoken, like eggs broken, are hard to repair.”
“What you are to be, you are now becoming.”
“Nobody stumbled into anything sitting down.”
“It’s very nice to be important, but more important to be nice.”
“Even a fish wouldn’t get hooked if he kept his mouth shut.”
“The only way to have a friend is to be one.”
Written by Claudia Reinhardt.