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sided the school house. I reached to pick it up and “snap”, it
bit me. I’ll tell you, I wasn’t so eager after that to be picked to
clean the erasers till I got a bit older. We had “paddling” in
our school, which the principal did if you were bad enough
to receive this. I did not experience this first hand, but my
brother did, he was a bit naughty when he was a kid. Our
parents were always informed if you “got out of line” at school.
And you usually were disciplined again once you got home.
This is quite the contrast to my mom’s memory as they had
such a strong level of self-discipline, manners, and respect,
that the teacher rarely had to discipline a child for acting up.
The school house that I attended no longer exists and the
one room school houses of my mom’s generation have almost
all but disappeared.
The school house symbolized the singular pride of a
community.
Ryan and I had the opportunity to explore this historic
all wooden school house built in 1904 standing on the
central edge of Hetland, SD. This is a very old community
with a lot of history dating back to the late 1800’s. Hetland
had every kind of business common to the Midwest. A
hardware store, general store, a grocery store, drug store,
hotel, bank, restaurants, barber shop, machine dealer,
blacksmith, wagon shop, lumberyard, coal dealer, three grain
elevators, a creamery, harness shop, a weekly newspaper,
livery and feed stable. They also had a doctor, photographer,
stone mason and several carpenters. By the 1900’s, Hetland
continued to grow and this historic school house was built
to accommodate the growing community. The school served
to educate not only the local children but also the children
from out laying agricultural areas. But like so many rural
South Dakota schools, just like my mother’s school and my
own grade school, it was closed by the early 1970’s. Unlike
our schools this is on the National Register of historic places
and continues to stand. Like most communities who lose
their school, they also lose their businesses. Hetland was
not immune to that as there were few homes or businesses
remaining in this once thriving community.
We find on the school grounds the original playground
equipment, consisting of a swing set, merry-go-round, seesaws, and slide. Once we entered the school house much of
what we find is still intact and in their original places as if
once those doors were closed for good almost fifty years ago
that no one had touched a thing. The foundation was caving
in and there was extensive water damage from the old roof
so there were rooms where plaster from the walls had fallen
off. The stairwell to the basement was almost gone as it had
collapsed in several places. The first floor still held metal
hooks down the hallway wall where the children would’ve
hung their coats, rusted now and full of cobweb’s. The first
classroom we entered had all windows boarded but half of
one window exposed enough light revealing the original
cast iron and wood desk lined up facing the front of the
room where the teachers desk stood, and chalkboards held
the ABC’s written across them. Books were displayed on
several of the desks and a table at the back of the room. An
old projector was also sitting outside of it’s case waiting to
be turned on. In a second hallway at one end was the foyer
or entryway to the front of the school and the bell tower was
just above. The other end of the hallway held two bathrooms,
clearly not in any kind of working condition and someone
with a sense of humor had placed hand written signs laying
across the broken toilet seats stating, “Out of Order”. A room
towards the back of the school held a piano and there was
not an empty spot of floor as more desk, chairs, boxes of
books and other items were chaotically scattered throughout
the room. Two large wooden staircases across from each
other led to the second floor and we proceeded with our
head lamps on, each ascending in opposite directions. The
second-floor class rooms still held chalk boards on the walls
and a few desks lined the rooms, but the water damage is even
more apparent on the second level as the metal tiled ceilings
showed massive rusting and holes and even more plaster from
the walls laid in chunks almost every where you walked. The
floor boards were soft to walk on and we both discussed to
be extra careful where we stepped. I find what I believe to
have been the principal’s office which was a very small room
with the desk still present. A wooden ladder went up the wall
and catches my eye, there is a hatch above it that led to the
attic. I hear Ryan calling my name to come, “you have to see
this”. So, my previous thought to climb the ladder and take
a peak is now gone as I follow his voice in the dark to one of
the most unusual things either of us had ever seen. On the
second floor at the back of the school was a gym. An all-wood
floor and a very narrow wooden balcony at the level of the
basketball hoops, went around three of the four walls. There
was a wooden ladder leading up to it that those attending a
game would’ve had to climb and a single row of folding chairs
would’ve been placed up there for the spectators to sit. We
had both just stood in confusion looking around at this odd
space. Why would you build a gym on the second floor? This
question we asked each other over and over trying to make
sense out of it. The floors were rotted in several spots and we
decided it was time for our tour to end before one of us finds
ourselves back on the first floor or even in the basement and
not by way of the stairs.
Once outside and the warmth of the sun hits us on that
early fall day we share the same hope for future generations.
To see and to experience life in a simpler time where values,
honor, and respect was the foundation of the school house.
And the school house was the foundation of the community.
It existed as a symbol of a community’s identity. Losing the
school meant losing your town’s identity and eventually the
communities very existence.
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