Everyone has memories of their school days. My fondest are
of those spent at Anderson Elementary, a beautiful white wooden two-story with
character. It is no more, unfortunately; demolished sometime during the late
1970s when it was deemed a fire hazard. I am not sure what year it was
constructed, but my mother attended classes there in the 1930s.
The spot where it sat is now a baseball field, right in the
middle of the tiny village of Anderson. When I pass by that site, the memories
of days spent there come flooding back. I mentally travel up and down those
halls, enter each classroom, climb the steps and walk into the old auditorium, walk
down those dangerous “fire escape” steps, see the coal pile alongside it.
I remember the teachers, my classmates, the things I learned there.
These memories are as vivid in my mind as if they happened only yesterday.
Anderson School was recognized all over the county as being
one of the best. It included elementary and junior high, through the 9th
grade. Teachers at the two high schools that received Anderson students for
senior high – Lauderdale County, or Rogersville, and Lexington –
acknowledged that their Anderson students were always way ahead in what they
had learned; star students.
Teachers back then were “old,” at least they seemed that way. Many were unmarried, having attended college and gone into the teaching
profession to support themselves. Today, we have so many young teachers, a good
thing for students, I think. But I am not complaining about my teachers; they
were the best.
My first grade teacher, Mrs. Elna Camp, or “Miss Camp,” was
like our substitute mother. She babied those having departure pains from
mothers, nursed our skinned knees when we fell during recess, was patient,
loving and kind. Second grade gave us Miss Cleo Givens, a bit more stern than
Miss Camp, but just what we children needed. She was a very good teacher.
Third grade brought us to Miss Velma Weathers, who was my
mother’s cousin. I had thought she might cut me a break since I was kin, but
that was not the case. I think I never got over the fact that she didn’t choose
me for the Aunt Polly role in our class’s yearly play, “Tom Sawyer.” She was a
unique lady, exposing us not only to our lessons, but to nature and the applied
arts as well. She bought all 20 or so students a miniature plastic Recorder and
taught us to play. She took us on walks through the nearby woods, teaching us the names of trees, identifying moss, insects and small animals – trying to instill in us a
love and appreciation of nature. It worked, for me at least. She also was a
conservationist long before it was fashionable, having us return from the
lunchroom with our half-pint milk cartons, which she had us tear in a certain
way and flatten. They would then be stacked in the “cloakroom” (why is that
perfectly good word never used anymore?) for the janitor to use to start
morning fires in the potbellied stove.
Yes, as improbable as it may seem today, our classrooms were
heated by coal-burning pot-bellied stoves! Mr. Camp, husband of Mrs. Camp
above, and later Mr. Fred Evans, arrived very early to start and feed the fires
that would keep children warm during the cold season. Throughout the day, teachers sent male
students to the pile with buckets for coal to replenish the fire during the day.
Mrs. Susie Hamilton, “Miss Susie,” taught us in fourth
grade. It seems classes became “harder” this year and we had to work more. But
there still was time for selecting books from the shelves at the back of the
room and reading them for “extra credit.” Miss Susie was noted for being a “tough”
teacher and I believe we all were a bit afraid of her. However, I was “teacher’s
pet,” or at least that’s what my classmates accused me of! I think I was just
fearful her wrath would be directed at me so I always tried to excel to please
her.
The fifth and sixth grade classrooms were on the second
story of the building. For some reason, passing to the fifth was an exciting
moment for students. As underclassmen, we were forbidden from every climbing those
stairs! And now it would become our daily home!
The Musical Miss Ruby Daley taught fifth grade. I remember
lots about this year. It was the first time our entire elementary school
presented a spring operetta and Miss Ruby organized it. She loved to sing and
led us in daily singing lessons. Some of the regular songs I remember are,”Froggie
Went A-Courtin',” “Home on the Range,” My Name is Yon Yohnson I Come From
Wisconsin,” “Fifteen Miles on the Erie Canal,” all the patriotic song and others too numerous to
mention.
But about the operetta. It was called Wedding of the Flowers
and fifth graders played the part of the roses. Miss Ruby brought all the
mothers of the girl students in for a demonstration on how to make our costumes
from pink and green crepe paper. Oh, how well I remember that little number;
kept it for years.
During practice sessions, Miss Ruby would illustrate the
dance steps we were to perform as we came onto the stage and I can to this day
see her twirling around -- in her dark
printed shirtwaist dress, thick stockings and old-fashioned black laced up high-heeled
shoes (the same kind that are, well, now back in style again!). Certain other
classes were the violets, tulips and daffodils. I still have the operetta
booklet that belonged to my sister, as she was the pianist.
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I could not find my copy, but a Google search produced this image on eBay. The wonders of the Internet! |
Sixth grade was exciting because we got a new teacher – and a
young one. All the previous ladies were “old,” or at least to us they were.
They were no more than in their 40s and 50s, but the way they dressed and their
demeanor was a throw-back to the old days. Now we were getting a teacher (maybe
early thirties) and she dressed in a more modern way. Mrs. Vida Mae Owens, a
very sweet lady, dealt with us in an extremely kind way, preparing us for
junior high, when we would move over to the adjacent brick one-story building.
I just remember being inspired and in awe of her and I also remember the
beginning of my life-long addition to reading. She encouraged us to check out books from the Bookmobile, which traveled from the large county library to outlying areas. The Bookmobile was a tremendous asset for
rural children who otherwise would not be able to travel the 25 or so miles to
the county library in Florence. I did a search and found it was established in 1948 and ceased operations in 1972.
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The Jr. High School Auditorium, which also was used by the Elementary School. |
Well, there it is; just a few of my memories of growing up
at Anderson Elementary School. Occasionally I speak with former classmates of
our experiences there and we all agree it was a wonderful school and we were so
privileged to have had that experience.
What are some of your memories of school days? Are they
pleasant? Are you still in touch with classmates from elementary school?