When I Was a Boy: Country Schools & Churches When
I was a boy there was not an
automobile in the United States, nor anywhere else in the world, for that
matter. In every rural American community there was a country school, a
post office and store, and, in easy reach, a church. In most of the towns
and villages there were livery stables. Only those who lived in rural
America during that period know what factors those institutions were in
community life. They began beating a retreat when the automobile made its
advent during the early days of the present century. In
our county, which is a sample of them all, there were 99 district or rural
schools, three first-class high schools and four second-class high schools
scattered over a territory that was 31 miles long and 25 miles wide. There
are now only 50 country school and 3 high schools. Two things contributed
to the need for so many schools. One was the number of children of school
age, which was much larger than now. The other was the poor roads incident
to that era. Except that school houses were close to homes, it would have
been impossible for a large part of the children to get any education at
all. There
was not so much as one married woman teacher in the entire county during
that era. Two things contributed to this. One was the prejudice against
married women in the schools. The other was that, with so many children to
raise, her place was in the home, anyway. Unmarried girls and bewhiskered
men monopolized teaching jobs until along about the first year of the
present century. Their pay ranged from $25 to $40 a month, only a few of
them getting as much as $50. Great stress was placed on Reading, Writing and Arithmetic. A favorite problem was one in connection with the number of bushels, or barrels, of corn a crib of stated dimensions contained. In view of the fact that most of the corn deals revolved about grain in the crib, this problem had a practical value on most every farm. Incidentally, not much corn was measured by the bushel during that period. It usually was bought or sold by the barrel. A barrel was the equivalent of five bushels, though nobody ever saw it measured in one. The custom was brought to our locality by Virginia and Kentucky pioneers. Both
the schoolhouse and the church were used as community centers. Once a
month the local debating
and literary society would hold forth at the schoolhouse, always with
practically every home represented. Participants took their assignments
seriously, devoting much time to
books from which information to the disadvantage of their opponents might
be gleaned. I believe the average rural school patron was better read
during that era than during the living present. The school tax until
comparatively recent years ranged from 20cents to 40cents on the $100
valuation, with very little help from the state. There was considerable
competition for the privilege of having the teacher as a boarder. For one
thing, she (or he) was expected to be a sort of tutor to the children.
Even more important during those scarce money days, was the $8 to $10 a
month the teacher paid for board and laundry. Because of bad roads, they
seldom went home for weekends. While
most of the decrease in number of rural schools was due to the shift of
pupils to town schools on bus routes, the fact remains that there has been
a very heavy decrease in number of pupils because of the present-day
preference for small families. And quite in contrast to the handful of
children now found in a country school, some having no more than 5, was
the 40 to 50 with which the teacher had to cope in former days. The
country church also was a community center during that era. A favorite
talking point with real estate agents was that a place was in easy reach
of church and school. This was because church-going was so general among
farm people at that time that they were unwilling to live in a community
in which there were no religious advantages. In our county, many of the
rural churches have closed up and quit during recent years. This, of
course, was not altogether because of the automobile. The change of
population incident to a real estate boom, and to a movement of older
people from town to city, was the real reason. For instance, what once
would be a very strong Baptist or Methodist Church, would lose a large
number of its paying members when new people who belonged to other
denominations moved to nearby farms. As a rule, they were unwilling to
become members of the neighborhood church. Having no church of their
choice to attend, most of them soon get out of the habit. Even more
distressing is that so many of them allow their children to grow up
without religious influences. Due
to these and other causes, there are about a fewer houses of worship in
our county than when I was a boy. There
also are about a dozen fewer post offices than the automobile era. They
were daily gathering places for people in every community. There are at
least two dozen fewer country stores. Of
the dozen or more livery stables, not one is left. In
addition to being community gathering places, the provided markets for
farm produce. And in addition market they furnished for driving horses and
feed, the stable, strange as this may seem, was a very popular place. Here
in Paris what was known as the Hay Club headquarter at the Wetmore and
Cissell livery barn. It was composed of bankers, teachers, merchants,
ministers an others who could find time to loaf. A volume could be written about the things that have gone out of community life in Rural America since the automobile came into general use, in one generation. |