Monday, November 2, 2009

Welcome Visitors from Kripplebush Schoolhouse

Members of the Board at Kripplebush: (left to right): Gail Hilsenbeck-Many,
Indian Rock's friendly greeter Bill Burke (in dunce cap), Joan Pugliese, Donna Miller,
Toni Countryman, Larry Scalla

Indian Rock Schoolhouse always welcomes visitors and representatives of other schoolhouses. We have met a number of interesting folks from near and far...and Kripplebush is far from Amenia.

Kripplebush is a small hamlet in Ulster County, across the Hudson River. These folks traveled for more than an hour to come to see our little 1858 schoolhouse, and to hear about all of you...our nearby friends.

Kripplebush is near Stone Ridge and High Falls. The schoolhouse is dated 1857 and looks very similiar to Indian Rock. The big difference is that the school building is not alone in the schoolyard. There is another two story Lodge Hall there which will be made into a museum on the first floor. They have no pavilion however.
And what did we learn from each other? We discussed programs in our respective schoolhouses, funding, hours and insurance issues. We enjoyed a picnic in the schoolhouse since it was so cold and damp outside that day - Oct 21st.
Indian Rock promised to visit their schoolhouse next spring to see their large building being finished. If you are interested in a field trip to Ulster County in 2010, let us know and we will
make sure you have directions.


Friday, January 23, 2009

Memories from Noxon Schoolhouse in LaGrange, New York


Memories from a Dutchess County Schoolhouse – School #3 in LaGrange, New York

By: Ginny Russell Stoetzner, Amenia

Ginny attended the District 3 schoolhouse known as the Noxon School on Diddell Road in the Town of LaGrange in 1944. She went to that school for first grade only when she was 5 years old. The school closed in 1945. She describes her schoolhouse experience as follows:

We walked to school a half a mile each way.
My teacher at the Noxon School was Miss VanWagner . She was nice but I never saw her again in later years.

I remember the older boys going outside in the morning to pump a pail of water and putting it on the coal stove to warm. There was a holder with paper cups near the door for students who needed a drink.

The only heat was the coal stove and it was kept filled by the “big boys”. I don’t remember being cold. When it rained, or was snowy, the wet coats hung on hooks near the front door, mittens dried by the stove If you were small you tried not to get too wet or you’d go home with a wet coat and snow pants. I think I had perpetually chapped hands from the wet mittens.
Before lunch we lined up for hand washing. One boy sprinkled powdered soap and another poured a little water. We washed and were rinsed with the water falling into another pail on the floor.
There were no reading groups that I recall. Even though I do not remember learning to read or write, I certainly remember Dick and Jane. We had music class with the teacher - she played the piano while the class sang. I don't remember the desks or a library shelf but I know there was no playground. We played across the road in a field. I also remember one of the older girls always fighting with the boys and one day she chased one into the boys’ outhouse. Big trouble that day!


After school most of the kids had farm chores to do. We had chickens and a big vegetable garden. I only had to gather eggs and pull weeds-but many had to bring the cows in from the field and milk them. My first love in those years were the cowboys on TV on Saturday A.M. westerns (1949).

Before Christmas, the students began to practice for the Christmas pageant. Only two first graders were chosen to be in it, and I was picked! Both of us got to be dolls under the Christmas tree and I got to wear lipstick! I wore my "Sunday" dress and shoes(usually I had to wear old fashioned high-tops), a bonnet and of course - the lipstick. My brother was the Jack-in-the-Box and drove my parents crazy practicing at home.
The only gift I remember for the teacher was at Christmas. My mother made corsages for the teacher with "real" evergreens, holly - berries and ribbons. She made them every year for all our teachers. We did have a school Christmas tree decorated with paper chains and handmade ornaments.

One of my biggest wishes for Christmas was a bicycle…I always wanted one, but I never got it. We lived on a narrow dirt road and had a long but rutted driveway. “ Too dangerous!” according to my parents. I learned to ride on my cousin’s bike one summer while visiting in Newport, RI.



When the Noxon Road Schoolhouse closed, Ginny Russell and her brother took the bus to Raymond Avenue School in Arlington and, according to Ginny, getting a ride was fun after walking to school. She was scared at first but had a wonderful second grade teacher. Ginny ran into her when the teacher was in her 80's and she remembered Ginny’s name.

Tell us your schoolhouse story!

Tell your one-room schoolhouse story on the Indian Rock blog….for the whole world to read on the internet. We are collecting as many stories of the old fashioned one room schools as we can ..anywhere, anytime.

Send your reminiscences about your school days as a word file, and a jpeg photo (or one of your childhood drawings) to
IndianRockschool@aol.com. If you are uncomfortable writing the story…just give us a punch list of the facts you remember.

We are especially looking for stories about the kids in your school, some of your most memorable teachers and what the area was like where you lived….what was the coolest prank ever pulled by the class bad boy? Did your teacher keep pet spiders? (mine did)
What was your favorite day ever at school?

Please don’t forget to include your name (and maiden name if applicable).
This is just for fun…so there are no fees involved or paid.





Sunday, November 16, 2008

Memories from a Country Schoolhouse

Order Form
Memories from a Country Schoolhouse by John Quinn


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Mailing Address:__________________________________________

Town: State: Zip:__________________________________________

Telephone: ______________________________________________

Email address: ___________________________________________

Please send ____ copies at $15 each plus $5 shipping and handling

Total enclosed ___________

Please make your check payable to: WCSA
Please mail your payment to: WCSA, PO Box 172, Amenia, New York 12501

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Who was this legendary one-room schoolhouse teacher?

Legendary Ladies enjoy
Recollections of Amenia Union and One-room Schoolhouses






























The Sharon Womens’ Club welcomed Indian Rock Schoolhouse to their April 18th meeting in Amenia Union. A group of Sharon women devoted to public service, these legendary ladies were a warm and interested audience for an Indian Rock trunk (in this case basket)show.
One of the previous and much-loved members of this organization of outstanding Sharon women was Kay (Humphreys) Kane, last school "ma'arm" of the Leedsville Schoolhouse

A short talk on the history of Amenia Union was presented before the illustrated lecture on the Amenia Union Schoolhouse (NYS side of the state line) and other nearby schoolhouses. The conversation quickly turned to legendary teachers of local schools on both sides of the State line.

One of the outstanding teachers in the Webutuck School District was Ella Staunton who began her career at the Amenia Union school. Ester Pollard and Bynon Kipp attended the Amenia Union School when Ella Staunton was a teacher there.

Ella Stauton’s name was very familiar to the assembled ladies of the Women’s Club. As we know Ella taught in several district schools, transferring to the brick high school, now known as the Amenia Elementary School when the Webutuck School District consolidated.



Another legendary teacher was mentioned: the unique Nettie Bump of South Amenia. Here is a topic where everyone has personal memories of the meanest, nicest, most special teacher at their school when they were children.


Thanks for inviting Indian Rock, Ladies!

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

It's Arbor Day again!


See you at Indian Rock for Arbor Day Fun – April 29 and 39th, 2010
First and second graders from the Amenia Elementary School will help Pine Cone Pete, in the person of Andy Durbridge, Rudy Eschbach and Beth Murphy (the Pine Cone Princess) at Indian Rock School’s two-day observance of Arbor Day on Wednesday, April 30 and Thursday May 1st.
While some of the children are planting trees, others will gather in the restored schoolhouse for an introduction to education in a one –room school and to talk about Arbor Day around the world with Miss Murphy.

Since the revival of the Arbor Day tradition on the grounds of the historic Indian Rock Schoolhouse, two flowering crab trees and five evergreens have been planted by Amenia school children. This year there will be white pines, thanks to Twin Brooks Garden Center in Millbrook, who have generously donated a trees to our efforts both this year and last.



Arbor Day 2007 – Mike O’Neil plants “his tree” with Pine Cone Pete and students.

Pine Cone Pete tells us that the trees will provide shelter for the birds in the winter in our wildlife schoolyard. The new shrubs planted last year will provide berries for them to eat.

We have invited many old friends to join us…and everyone is welcome. Parents, younger siblings, and friends are invited to both days of the celebration. Come around 11 am. Bring a bag lunch and drink to the picnic pavilion for a celebration of Indian Rock’s 150th birthday. There will be complementary birthday treats provided by our friends Joe McEnroe, the Bank of Millbrook and Freshtown of Amenia.

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Memories of Childhood






Christmas in New York City in the 5o's

The sunlight in December is so very special. It seems to cast a promising glow on the tall tenement buildings as an apology for having to leave so early each day. It’s the sunlight that I so much recall as the special ‘back light’ for my father’s and my trip to find the ‘perfect’ Christmas tree.

We lived in the mid Bronx. Most of the people in our neighborhood celebrated Chanukah. Thus, Dad and I would have to trek across the Bronx, on foot, until we could find a little tree that we could afford and then carry back to our five story walk-up apartment on Walton Avenue. In the 1950’s $2.00 is what Dad felt we could pay for a tree. Once, though, when the short day grew dark, we spent $5.00. After all, Mom was waiting for us at home with eggnog and the boxes of decorations were waiting to be released from their wrappings after a long year of storage.


We always found the perfect tree. It seemed to wait for us. It had to persevere the hauling through the streets and hoisting up the many flights of stairs to our three-room apartment. It always amazed me that so many of the other children in the building would throw open their doors and watch us go by. They knew that the next day they would be invited to come up and see how beautifully we had transformed the tired tree in to a glowing Christmas tree. Dad would often leave some ornaments for my friends to place on the tree themselves. I can remember the glow in their eyes and see their mouths slightly open in awe. I enjoyed Chanukah with them and now they would enjoy Christmas with us.

Little Janet Neumeister with her favorite book


There were fifty apartments in our building; thus, one can imagine how both magical and overwhelming Christmas Eve was for me as a child. One of my treasures was a music box that played ‘Silent Night’. Alas, one year it broke. My father could see how upset I was and late one night, he took it apart. He handed it to me with a smile and a wink! What to my surprise, the little box piped out Silent Night backwards. It was so pretty; I can still hum it.


On Christmas Eve I’d go to bed and try with all my might to stay awake. I wanted to hear Santa coming from the roof to the fire escape; we had no chimney. He always came. How he could find us I never knew. BUT WHAT I DID KNOW was that when I heard his voice and his jingling bells, he sounded so smartly just like my father! I can still hear his voice and hear the bells jingling. Christmas thrives in one’s heart and memories.

Janet Neumeister Nickson is a vital member of many Sharon organizations. Even though she is busy with every activity in that town from the Audubon Center to the Historical Society, she finds time to read the Indian Rock Schoolhouse blog. She writes some of her own recollections of a childhood holiday growing up in New York City.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

Of Christmas Past in the One-room Schoolhouse





Stained glass provided the backdrop for the Leedsville school chorus. The students are (from left, back row): Peggy Okenden, James Farley, Mary Duffy. Middle row: Helen Farley, Alice Duffy, Joe Duffy, Margaret Duffy, Josephine Farley. Front row: Alice Farley, Frankie Farley, Suzanne Farley


The two high points of the year for youngsters going to the rural common schoolhouses in Eastern Dutchess County in the 19th and early 20th centuries were the last day of the school year and Christmas.

The celebration of Christmas took many forms, limited only by the imagination and ingenuity of the young teachers who had limited materials and resources. Art supplies were almost non-existent unless the pupils and teacher could find materials they could reuse from home or find in the nearby fields and forests. Some children found pine cones to paint for decorations, some strung popcorn at home to bring to school for the tree.

Kay (Humphrey) Kane, who taught at the Leedsville one-room School for almost 10 years until it closed in 1944, recalled how planning for the various holiday activities was worked into the December school days leading up to Christmas.

“We still had our daily routine in the ‘three R’s” but we were always able to fit in getting ready for the school’s holiday observance. I remember one year I had the pupils save their better school papers - compositions, spelling tests and colored maps – and put them together in a booklet with a Christmas cover as a present for their parents. I think both the kids and the mothers and fathers were pretty tickled.”

Margaret Duffy Erskine Quinn, one of the six Duffy children who went to the Leedsville School, remembers the Christmas Kay Humphrey had the pupils build a “cathedral window” as the backdrop for their pageant singing. Gerald Juckett, father of the family with whom Miss Humphrey boarded, put together a frame of wooden lath and then the students used colored cellophane to make what they thought was a beautiful stained glass window.

Mrs. Quinn recalls that it was the same year Miss Humphrey had the students as members of the Junior Red Cross, put together packages of wrapping paper, candy and cookies for the old folks at the Dutchess County Infirmary. They distributed their little gifts after the young chorus sang Christmas carols to an appreciative audience.


Starting early in December, Katherine Turnbull, the Amenia schools’ itinerant music teacher would start the pupils practicing the songs that would be part of each school’s Christmas observance.

The late Leland Hulst, who attended Willow Brook school on Sinpatch Road in the 1920’s, tells that their annual Christmas play brought out the whole neighborhood:
“Ella Staunton, our teacher, would have our Christmas celebration in the evening and that was the only time the kerosene lamp that hung from the center of the ceiling would be lighted. “

It may be nostalgia for the simple, homemade Christmas past that gives these recollections the warm and peaceful glow of the season. It’s there though, and it’s good.

From the column published December 21, 2000 in the Millerton News called “Memories from a Country Schoolhouse”. It was written and researched by John Quinn, trustee of the Indian Rock Schoolhouse Association. Edited by Janet Nickson.