by Julie Carter
The yellow
busses are rolling again and school yards are alive with color, movement and
sounds of laughing children.
It is a decades
old routine that brings with it a wave of nostalgia for many, me included. There
are generations of America’s students that can recall how much different things
were “back then.”
I started
school in a one-room country school house along with less than a dozen others in
grades one through eight. I began in the first grade with three other children
because they either hadn’t invented kindergarten yet or it at least it hadn’t
reached the rural mountain regions of Southern Colorado.
All the grades
shared one teacher, a huge wood stove in the middle of the room and a chalk
board that was filled with everything from primer words to eighth grade math
problems. And yes, Dick, Jane, Spot and Puff were part of my formative
years.
We all brought
sack lunches as there was no lunch program—free or otherwise. We had a “Boys”
and a “Girls” bathroom option in the form of wood outhouses at the back of the
school yard. I don’t recall if they were one- or two-holers.
Recess offered
baseball, a set of swings with board seats complete with splinters and the usual
playground games that required no equipment, only imagination. The apple tree at
the back of the school yard carried the legend that it had begun when students
from earlier years had thrown their lunch apple cores in a pile in that spot. I
thought that was a magical story.
We had a
Christmas play on a small stage that became available by removing part of a wall
between the classroom and the backroom of the school house. I can remember being
terrified to stand alone and sing my part of Jolly Old St. Nicholas. Now that I
am aware of my lack of musical ability, I know there were many reasons to be
afraid.
Gasoline was
right at 25-cents a gallon and the drive to ferry me from the ranch to the
school was across a country dirt road that included three creek crossings each
way. I spent many weeks in the winter bunking with my teacher and her family on
a ranch closer to the school.
While that
saved on long walks if we were stuck in the snow, fuel costs and wear and tear
on vehicles, it often made a little girl very homesick. But I loved my teacher
dearly and she found a place in my heart like I suppose many first grade
teachers do.
She did what
teachers are supposed to do. She sparked in me a desire to learn and the belief
I could do anything I set my mind to do. Even if she did put my hair in rag
curls to spiff me up for school photos.
The rural
education system was in transition. That unique one-room school experience
lasted only a year for me when it was “consolidated” and the students bussed to
a more central school location.
I thought I’d
hit the big time. There were at least eight kids in my class. Better yet, there
was a filling station across the road that sold penny candy at lunch time.
Things were looking up.
The first
school building was built of rock—a foundation that formed walls up to large
windows and a peaked roof that held a bell tower pointing to the blue Colorado
sky above.
I’d like to
believe that one important year there began to form my life in the same way
--rock solid underneath and always reaching to the sky.
Julie can be reached
for comment at jcarternm@gmail.com.
"...rock solid underneath and always reaching to the sky." Yup, I'd say that was a pretty accurate description of Julie Carter. Hope she doesn't mind me using these pictures from her facebook page.
"...rock solid underneath and always reaching to the sky." Yup, I'd say that was a pretty accurate description of Julie Carter. Hope she doesn't mind me using these pictures from her facebook page.
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