Jackson County Notables

Events, locations, and industries important
to Jackson County history.

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FRONTIER EDUCATION

When enough pioneers settled in an area about 3-4 miles square, some settler would suggest the necessity of a school. The adults of the neighborhood would gather by common consent to a place convenient to wood and water, and with ax and from in hand, the community created the school, log by log.

Frontier education could not be taken for granted. Where it existed it had to be scrimped for - wrung, so to speak, out of lives which to begin with were not the most comfortable.

An early day school near the home of ex-governor L. W. BOGGS on South Spring Street was described by FANNIE (FRISTOE) TWYMAN: "It was a log house with wooden chimney well daubed with mud. A log was left out of the south side for a window which extended across the side of the building. Underneath the window a plank rested on wooden pegs. This was our writing desk where we stood and worked." She could have continued the description by saying that the seats were rough benches without backs; the children sat with their legs dangling or folded beneath the seats, depending on their height. Always visible as evidence of discipline was the flat ferrule or hickory switch, hung on the wall. Early severe discipline was partly due to the popularity of the well-known "spare the rod and spoil the child" philosophy and partly to necessity. 

Frontier lads, however, incapable they might be of spellin' or cipherin', were a husky lot and many a frontier teacher was "ducked" or "locked out" if he aroused their wrath in some manner.

When pioneer children learned to "cipher" and spell, "carry" and "borrow" in subtraction and long division, and were able to read and write, that was considered sufficient. Educational opportunities for boys were obtained only between corn-shucking and ground-breaking time. If the girls knew how to attend to domestic duties, spinning, and could read the simple characters of the Bible, they were adequately educated.

The first schools on the frontier were known as subscription schools, where the parent paid accordingly to the number of students sent. The early schoolmaster often accepted his wages in coonskins, bear meat, venison, and similar frontier commodities.

Life was not easy for the schoolmaster. Books were scare, paper high, slates a luxury. It was the day of quill pens and homemade ink. The teacher taught from an hour after sunrise until an hour before sunset. The student learned the rudiments of grammar, spelling, readin' and 'rithmetic, and though the frontiersmen was seldom "well-educated" he learned the "necessities" in those early subscription schools.

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This page was last updated August 2, 2006.