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III THE
SCHOOLS
BETWEEN 1830 AND 1860 IN
times of peace the changes wrought in the habits, manners, and
institutions of
a people are very gradual. Shreds and remnants of every custom which
has had
general acceptance linger long after that custom has in most quarters
disappeared. Thus, in the New England school of the period just
preceding the
Civil War, the educational methods and the schoolroom environment
continued in
many communities to be much the same as half a century before. What is
here
recounted is fairly characteristic of the majority of schools and
neighborhoods, but it will not bear a too literal application to
particular
towns and villages. The
school year still consisted of two terms, one in summer and the other
in
winter. As a rule, a man taught in winter and a woman in summer, and
the
teachers “boarded round.” The custom of boarding round was, however,
less universal
than formerly, and was gradually falling into disuse. Schoolbooks were
becoming
more varied and numerous, and were less stilted in style than in times
past.
Nor were they so solemnly religious as they had been. Instead, they
were
inclined to be gently moralizing, and never told a story without
preaching a
little sermon at the end, even if they did not pause now and then
midway to
give a dose of proper advice. I
wish to describe with some detail an average school of the period
located in an
outlying village of one of the old Massachusetts towns of the
Connecticut
Valley. The score of houses which made up the hamlet were scattered
along a
two-mile strip of meadow land which lay between a low mountain ridge on
the
east and the river on the west. Midway on the single north and south
road stood
the weather-worn little school building. A narrow, open yard, worn bare
of
grass for a space about the doorstep, separated the schoolhouse from
the dusty
road. At one end of the building a big apple tree partly shadowed it.
At the
other end was a lean-to shed where the wood for the fire was stored. Inside of the schoolhouse, a narrow entry ran across the north side, but this was completely filled in the middle by a great chimney. The boys kept their caps on the lines of pegs in the front entry; and in a closet back of the chimney, entered from the schoolroom, the girls hung their sunbonnets or hoods, and other wraps. On the way to school. The
small square main room had bare, plastered walls and ceiling. Not only
was the
plaster grimy with smoke and age, but it was much cracked, and here and
there
were holes that the boys had pounded or dug through. Each side of the
room,
except the north, had two windows which looked out on the farm fields,
orchards, and mountain. The chief feature of the windowless side of the
room
was a wide fireplace with its brick hearth. To the right of the
fireplace stood
a broom, and whenever the crackling fire snapped out a coal on the
floor, the
first boy who saw it was expected to jump up and brush it back. It was
not
always that a boy would take the trouble to brush the coals back by
using the
broom. A quicker method was to kick them to the hearth with his boot or
to
crush the fire out by stepping on it. The boards about the hearth were
therefore blackened with many little hollows where the coals had
fallen, and
were also well strewn usually with the powdered charcoal resulting from
the
coals being stepped on. These miniature explosions from the fireplace
were
quite entertaining to the children and made a grateful break in the
monotony of
the school work. Another
feature of the north side of the room was a small blackboard between
the
fireplace and the entrance. On this the big boys did their sums. The
girls did
not use it. A very moderate amount of mathematics was supposed to
suffice for
females, and they stopped short of problems that needed to be done on a
blackboard. Around the other three sides of the room, against the wall, ran a continuous desk, accompanied by a backless bench well polished with use. To get to their places, or to leave them, the boys would sit down, lift their heels, and with a quick whirl swing them to the other side. The girls on their side of the room had two hinged openings in this seat, which could be lifted to allow them to pass in and out, but most of them preferred to whirl as the boys did. A part of the time the scholars eased themselves of the discomfort of their backless seats by turning about and using the edge of the desk as a support. Within the hollow square bounded by this outer desk and seat, on each of the three sides, was a movable bench with a back shoulder high. The end seats on these benches were thought to be particularly desirable, because they were so built as to have a support there for the elbow. The benches were for the smaller children who sat on them facing the center of the room, where was the teacher’s desk and a single stiff backed wooden chair. An old-time schoolgirl costume. The teacher’s desk was a simple four-legged affair with drawers in it that could be locked. The locking was an attribute of some consequence, for besides being a repository for various articles that were the private property of the teacher, the drawers were a place of detention for certain belongings of the pupils which had been confiscated. Among the latter, pieces of rubber at one time figured very prominently. This occurred while the school was passing through a period of rubber chewing. Rubber overshoes were in those days made of thick, black, natural rubber. After they were worn out, squares that made very good erasers could be cut from the heavier parts. The children discovered that chewing turned the rubber white, and they decided they preferred erasers of that color. In beginning on a fresh piece the chewing was far from easy, but the rubber gradually softened as the process continued. Often the older scholars would get the smaller ones to do the preliminary masticating, and of course the little ones felt it an honor to do this for the big pupils and undertook the tiresome task willingly. As the rubber whitened it became much more elastic, and if you chose, you could stretch it over your fingers, fill it with air and make it explode with a pleasing pop. The master took away quantities of it and put the spoil in the secret recesses of his desk, or threw it into the fire; but the little folks persisted in the manufacture for a long time. Enjoying a Saturday holiday. The
chief school dignitary of the village was the “prudential
committee-man.” He
hired the teacher; he bought the water pail, the dipper, and the broom;
and he
saw that the woodhouse was properly filled and the premises kept in
repair. His
position was not what the poet calls “a downy bed of ease,” for he was
the
subject of much comment and criticism. It was thought he had too strong
a
tendency to hire one of his own daughters when he possessed an
unmarried one
sufficiently advanced in age and learning; and, no matter who it was he
selected, the teacher he hired frequently failed to suit the community.
If, in
such a case, the committee-man took sides with the teacher, the
miniature war waxed
quite fierce. On one occasion, in a quarrel over a teacher whom the
committee-man would not dismiss, hostilities were more than a year in
duration.
All but six children left the school, and the dissenters hired a
teacher and
had a school of their own in one of the dissenting farmers’ little
out-buildings which had been used as a broom shop. It was the duty of the district committee-man to go after the teacher whom he had engaged, if that person lived in a neighboring town. The committee-man rarely started soon enough to get his charge to the schoolroom on time; and the scholars, who gathered at nine o’clock, would “train around and have a gay time” while they awaited the teacher’s arrival. Sometimes the teacher, before beginning, had to be taken to the “examining committee” at the town center and his or her qualifications tested by sundry questions. In such a case the teacher might not reach the schoolhouse ready for duty until afternoon. The school at work. We
will suppose that the first week in May has come, and that the district
committee-man has brought the new school ma’am. After leaving her at
the
schoolhouse, he carries her trunk to his home, where it is to stay
through the
term. She is to board round, and it has already been decided where her
stopping
place for the first week shall be. Monday noon the children of that
particular
home take charge of her, and feel it a great honor to escort her to
“their
house” to dinner. The teacher’s advent into a family was always the
occasion of
extra preparation in the way of food and “tidying up,” and conversation
while
she was present became a more than ordinarily serious occupation. Boarding
round, with its accompanying necessity of “visiting,” change of
quarters, and
frequent making of new home acquaintances, was something of a hardship.
The
teacher found her quarters far from agreeable at times; but there was
no
picking places. The best bedroom, to which she was consigned, was
perhaps
stuffy with the gathered must of many months’ unoccupancy, or the
people were
rough and slatternly in their habits, or the food was ill-cooked or
scanty. I
do not mean that these things were the rule, but they were to the
boarder-round, to some extent, unavoidable. Schools
kept from Monday morning till Saturday noon. On Saturday afternoons the
teacher
went to the committee-man’s and did her washing. She stayed over Sunday
and
attended church with the family. Some week-day evening, after school,
she would
probably again repair to the committee-man’s to do her ironing. In winter the teacher in some sections found himself feasted the whole term through on fresh pork. Fresh pork was esteemed one of the most palatable and substantial dishes the farm produced, and, on the principle of giving the teacher the best, each family put off hog-killing until he came. His invitation, delivered by the children, would be: “Our folks are goin’ to butcher next week, and want you to come to stay at our house.” Or an excuse for delaying his visit would come in this form: “Our folks want you to wait till week after next, ‘cause we’re goin’ to kill a pig then.” The master was heartily sick of pork long before the winter was through. Passing the water. Immediately
after the morning session began, the teacher read a selection from the
Testament and offered a short extempore prayer. Children began to
attend
school, in summer, soon after they passed their third birthday. At
first they
had no books, and their chief effort was given to sitting still. They
were
taught the alphabet at the schoolmistress’s knee, and perhaps she
pointed out
the letters with a pretty penknife. The little folks found that
penknife
wonderfully attractive, and it was a great happiness to handle it and
look at
it when the teacher lent it to them. Besides the letters, the teacher taught the smallest ones various little poems, such as “Mary had a little lamb,” “Twinkle, twinkle, little star,” and “How doth the little busy
bee
Improve each
shining hour.”
Then
there were certain jingles, which were not only poetry, but exercises
in
arithmetic as well. Fancy a little tot solemnly repeating the
following: — Who goes each day to school; And though I am but four years old, I’ll prove I am no fool. “For I can count one, two, three, four, Say one and two make three; Take one away, and two remain, As you may plainly see. “Twice one are two, twice two are four, And six is three times two; Twice four are eight, twice five are ten; And more than this I do. “For I can say some pretty rhymes About the dog and cat; And sing them very sweetly, too, And to keep time I spat. “And, more than all, I learn that God Made all things that I see; He made the earth, he made the sky, He made both you and me.” This
chant was accompanied by appropriate gestures, such as counting on the
fingers,
pointing, and clapping. The rhymes and verses learned by the children were often repeated in concert, and were one of the features of “examination day.” Besides the moralizing, the arithmetical, and the story-telling verses, the children were taught hymns and short poems that were distinctly religious in nature. When the teacher’s taste was musical, they had singing in school, and the virtues of the “pure and sparkling water” were extolled in temperance songs. There was no attempt to teach the children to read music, and a book was rarely used. The exercise was introduced simply because it was cheerful and agreeable, and they all enjoyed it. Sometimes the tune was “pitched” by the teacher, sometimes by one of the better singers among the pupils. To “pitch” a tune was to start it and supposedly get it neither too high nor too low. Gymnastics. By
the time the smallest children had the alphabet learned they were
supplied with
a Webster’s Speller. Later they had a
“Child’s Guide,” or a “Young
Reader.”
These books contained some little stories and poems, and were
illustrated with
rude woodcuts, but the owners of the books thought the pictures were
very
pretty. After the first reader the child advanced to an
“Intelligent Reader,”
and finally to a “Rhetorical Reader.” The
last-named volume was not illustrated
and was bound in full buff leather like a law-book. The reading books
were only
used in the afternoon; but several classes read from the New Testament
in the
morning. The Gospels and the Acts of the Apostles were the sections
which they
studied, and these they read straight through, skipping nothing but the
opening
chapter of Matthew, which is mainly composed of the hard names of the
patriarchs. The
beginners’ book in mathematics was Colburn’s Intellectual Arithmetic.
Its first
question was, “How many thumbs have you on both hands? “but in a few
pages
fractions were reached, and quite intricate problems. It was severe
training,
and the scholars all hated their Colburn’s, and some of them shed tears
in
utter discouragement. After this “mental arithmetic” came a “written
arithmetic,” which was apparently supposed by educators to be more
difficult
than the former, but which the children found comparatively easy. The
problems
in this they did on their slates. Civilization
in later days decreed that the proper way to make erasures from a slate
was to
have a bottle of water and a rag. In earlier times, and those not very
far
removed, the natural method was almost universal; that is, the scholar
spit on
his slate, rubbed the moisture around with the tips of his fingers,
then
established a more vigorous friction with the ball of his thumb, and
finally
polished his slate off with the back of his sleeve. That done, he
settled
himself down to conquer fresh fields in the mathematical world. In the course of time the children began the study of Peter Parley’s Geography. The book was small and square, and it had a number of pictures in it to give the child an idea of some of the strange peoples and curious animals that are to be found on the earth. For instance, there was a picture of a Chinaman with which the young student was sure to be impressed. His eyes were slanting, his hair was braided in a “pigtail” that hung down his back, he had a conical hat on his head and funny shoes on his feet. Across his shoulders he bore a wooden yoke, from the ends of which were suspended by their tails long strings of rats. How could the Chinese eat such things? What a strange people they were! Among the small separate pictures of animals was one of the hippopotamus — oh! so large and ugly! — and one of the rhinoceros with a dreadful horn right on his nose. It is no wonder if the little girls shuddered when they looked at these pictures. A present. Peter
Parley in his text by no means confined himself to the technicalities
of the
subject. He tried to be entertaining and informal, and, what would
scarcely be
expected in a geography, he availed himself “of occasional
opportunities to
inculcate lessons of morality and religion upon the youthful heart.”
But the
portion of the text that sank deepest into the memories of those who
studied
the book was a poem in the early pages which began thus: — “The World is round, and
like a ball
Seems swinging in the air, A sky extends around it all, And stars are shining there. Water and land upon the face Of this round world we see, The land is man’s safe dwelling-place, But ships sail on the sea.” The
more advanced pupils studied Murray’s Grammar, and found out what
nouns, verbs,
etc., were, and learned to parse blank verse. Then there was Peter
Parley’s
History, in two volumes. Volume I dealt with the New World, and Volume
II began
with Adam and the Garden of Eden, and told the story of the Old World.
Only the
first book was usually studied in the district school. Another
little book to be mentioned was Watts on the Improvement of the Mind.
This was
a deep and serious essay on the methods and the desirability of mental
improvement. It was studied by only the oldest scholars, and even they
found
much of it beyond their comprehension. At one time the more advanced pupils took up botany. The teacher’s desk had a vase on it, and during the blossom season the botany class kept the vase well filled with wild flowers. After school. The
times were sufficiently advanced so that the children now had “boughten
writing
books” instead of home-made ones, steel pens instead of quills, and in
a meagre
way pencils instead of plummets. The writing books were square in
shape, ruled
inside, but had no printed copies at the top of the page. These the
master had
therefore to set. He was supposed to do this each night after school,
but if he
forgot it, he had to set the copies when the writing hour came. Some
pupils
wrote faster than others, and the smart one who filled out his page and
still
had more time at once desired to inform the teacher of his progress and
to get
a new copy. The boy raised his hand, therefore, half rose in his seat,
and
nearly wrung his arm off in a frantic effort to get the teacher’s
immediate
attention. Some boys would even snap their fingers and clear their
throats in
the very hoarsest and most asthmatic manner of which they were capable.
These
violent methods of attracting the teacher’s attention were, of course,
not
confined to the writing lesson. A
common requirement among teachers was that each child should recite a
verse of
Scripture at the close of the afternoon session. Hence, when four
o’clock
approached, Bibles were drawn forth, and a diligent search began for
short
verses, and a hasty attempt made to fix the one singled out in the
mind. There
was little solemnity about this exercise; rather, it was farcical and
humorous.
“John,
your verse,” says the teacher. Up
pops the boy like a Jack-in-the-box, snaps out, “Jesus wept,” and with
a grin
drops into his seat. “Pray
without ceasing,” “Rejoice evermore,” “The Lord spake unto Moses,
saying,” are
examples of the verses which found favor in the children’s minds. They
had the
merit of shortness, if no other. The boy was always serious when he
rose,
always rattled off the words very fast, and beamed with a never failing
smile
at the close of his performance. On
one occasion a boy’s verse ran, “With God all things are peculiar.” “What?”
said the teacher, “what was that?” The
boy repeated his words. The teacher doubted their authenticity, and the
boy, on
the following Sunday, went to his original source, which was a motto
hung in
the Sunday-school room at church, and found that the lettering in old
English
text had confused him. What it really said was, “With God all things
are possible.”
In the middle of each school session came recess. First the girls went out for a quarter of an hour, and when they were called in, the boys went out for the same length of time. Railroads were beginning to be built, but through the village of which I write, the old stages still ran. When the clatter and rumble denoting the approach of one of these vehicles was heard during school hours, the eyes of the children were sure to turn toward the windows in the hope of catching a fleeting glimpse of the big coach as it dashed past. To be out at recess when one went by was a great treat. Yet the children were a little afraid of it — the coach was so large, and, drawn by its four horses, it thundered past so swiftly. It was an impressive sight, and to the child the passengers seemed superior beings, and the whole thing a vivid representation of power and of the mystery and vastness of the outside world. Ready for School. There
had been various changes in dress since the beginning of the century.
Homespun
had almost disappeared. Not many families could afford to buy “store
clothes”
for their boys, but cloth was purchased ready woven, and was cut and
made at
home into the required garments. Economy was studied in making up
clothing, and
the mother was careful to cut the suit for the growing boy several
sizes larger
than his present stature demanded. The boy had reason to complain at
first of
the bagginess of his garments, but before they were worn out he was
pretty sure
to be disturbed because of their general tightness and of their
scantiness at
the extremities. But this was the common lot of boys, and they might
count
themselves lucky if they were clothed in new store cloth, and not in
something
made over from the cast-off apparel of their elders. The
boys’ caps were homemade too, sometimes of broadcloth, sometimes of
catskin or
muskrat skin. Often a leather visor was fastened on in front. At the
sides were
earlaps with strings at the ends. When in use the strings were tied
under the
chin; at other times the earlaps were turned up at the side of the cap,
and the
strings tied over the top. Both
boys and girls went to school barefoot in summer, but for special
occasions had
shoes. On the approach of cold weather the boys were sure to remind
their
parents that they needed a new pair of boots. These were roughlooking
cowhides,
into the tops of which the boys usually tucked their “pant legs.” At
parties
and such other places as the tucked-in style would seem out of place,
the pants
were drawn down on the outside of the bootlegs, where they developed an
irritating and uncontrollable tendency to hitch themselves upward. The
boots
were hardly wearable unless they were kept well greased, and even then
the
continual slopping around in snow and water made a series of hard
wrinkles
gather at the ankles. The wrinkles were particularly unyielding on cold
mornings. There was no right and left nonsense about these broad-soled,
square-toed boots, and the careful boy took pains to change them to
opposite
feet with regularity. He considered that to be the only way to keep
them
subdued and symmetrical. The girls’ dresses were of gingham in summer and of a fine-checked woollen in winter. They were very plain and simple in pattern, and were fastened down the back with hooks and eyes. The dresses were longer than are now in use, and. with them were worn some curious garments known as “pantalets.” A pantalet was like a straight sleeve, fastened just below the knee and extending downward to the ankles. It was necessary to tie them quite tightly to keep them from slipping and they were always something of a trial on account of their tendency not to stay put. They might be either white or colored. White stockings were customary. For a little girl to wear black stockings would have been thought shockingly inappropriate. In warm weather the girls all wore gingham or calico sunbonnets; in winter quilted hoods, which were very comfortable and often were bright in color and gay with ribbons. They had long plaided coats that almost swept the ground and that had a wide cape. About their necks they wore knitted tippets. Out at little recess. The
boys had overcoats, but they thought them effeminate, and only put them
on in
the severest weather. Their chief protection from the cold in the way
of an
extra wrap was a striped knitted scarf which they called a “comforter.”
If the
schoolroom was chilly, they might keep their comforters wound around
their
necks all through the school session. Every child had a pair of
mittens. White
was the orthodox color for the girls’ mittens, and red and blue in
stripes for
the boys’. The shoes worn by the girls came barely up to their ankles
and were
slight protection when there was snow on the ground. Their feet were
“sopping”
in winter a good share of the time. Through the summer term the girls
wore
gingham aprons, or, in the case of one or two families esteemed “rich,”
black
silk ones. Among
the most vivid recollections that grown-up people have of their school
days are
the memories of the punishments inflicted. What then stirred them to
fear and
trembling and anger now lies far off, mellowed by the haze of passing
years,
and though the echoes of the old feelings are many times awakened, the
punishments are, in the main, like episodes in story-land, which we
think of as
onlookers, not as actors. The crude roughness and the startling effects
produced have lost their old-time tragedy, and often have turned
humorous. “Spare
the rod and spoil the child” was a Bible text which received the most
literal
acceptance both in theory and practice. Teachers with tact to govern
well
without resort to force were rare, and it was the common habit to
thrash the
school into shape by main strength. Indeed, the ability to do this was
considered by all the elders of that day of prime importance. Even the
naturally mild-tempered man was an “old-fashioned” disciplinarian when
it came
to teaching, and the naturally rude and coarse-grained man was as
frightful as
any ogre in a fairy tale. In
summer, unless the teacher was an uncommonly poor one, or some of the
scholars
uncommonly wild and mischievous, the days moved along very harmoniously
and
pleasantly. In winter, however, when the big boys came in, some of them
men
grown, who cared vastly more about having a good time than getting
learning, an
important requisite of the master was “government.” He ruled his little
empire,
not with a rod of iron, but with a stout three-foot ruler, known as a
“ferule,”
which was quite as effective. Some
of the big boys who were there “just to raise the mischief,” would
perhaps dare
the master to go outside and fight. Of course he wouldn’t do that, but
at times
he had quite serious scuffles with rebellious pupils right in the
schoolroom.
The boys, on their part, would fight like tigers and make the master’s
nose
bleed and tear his clothes. The
really severe teacher had no hesitation in throwing his ferule at any
child he
saw misbehaving, and it is to be noted that he threw first and spoke
afterward.
Very likely he would order the culprit to bring him the ferule he had
cast at
him, and when the boy came out on the floor would further punish him.
Punishment by spatting the palm of the hand with a ruler was known as
“feruling.” The smarting of the blows was severe while the punishment
lasted,
but this was as nothing to a “thrashing.” The boy to be thrashed was
himself
sent out to cut the apple-tree twigs with which he was to be whipped.
Poor
fellow! Whimpering, and blinded by the welling tears, he slowly
whittles off
one after another of the tough twigs. This task done, he drags his
unwilling
feet back to the schoolroom. “Take
off your coat, sir!” says the master. The
school is hushed into terrified silence. The fire crackles in the wide
fireplace, the wind whistles at the eaves. The boy’s tears flow faster,
and he
stammers a plea for mercy. Then the whip hisses through the air, and
blows fall
thick and fast. The boy dances about the floor, and his shrill screams
fill the
schoolroom. His mates are frightened and trembling, and the girls are
crying.
When the sobbing boy is sent to his place, whatever his misdemeanor may
have
been, the severity of the punishment has won him the sympathy of the
whole
school, and toward the master there are only feelings of fear and hate.
As for
the culprit, he in his heart vows vengeance, and longs for the day when
he
shall have the age and stature to thrash the teacher in return.
Occasionally a
lad sent after switches made use of his liberty to slip off home, but
he had to
“catch it” when he came to school the next day. As one of the old-time pupils expresses it, “The men teachers were often regular rough-cuts.” One master of this class, when he noticed a boy misbehaving, had a habit of rushing at the culprit, catching him by the collar, and dashing him over the desks out to open floor space, where he would administer a thrashing. The children thought he acted as if he was going to kill the boy. Loitering on the way home from school. The
most troublesome boys were not by any means always ill-natured. Often
they were
merely mischievous. The trouble might be due to an active mind and lack
of
employment. A boy who learned his lessons easily would have a lot of
time on
his hands. He couldn’t keep still, and presently the teacher would
catch him
doing something that he ought not to do. Then he got a whipping. Very
likely he
might be a cordy little rascal, afraid of nothing, and about as
disagreeable to
tackle as a healthy hornet. The encounter was no fun for the teacher;
and the
boy, if he was punished frequently and severely, planned to lick that
teacher
when he grew up. But I never have heard of a boy who took this delayed
vengeance.
Doubtless
the whippings of the period varied much in severity, and, unless the
master was
altogether brutal or angered, the blows were tempered according to the
size of
the boy and the enormity of his offence. Nor were the boy’s cries
always a criterion
of the amount of the hurt. It was manifestly for his interest to appear
in such
terrible distress as to rouse the master’s pity, and with this in mind
he to
some extent gauged his cries. Nevertheless, the spectacle was not an
edifying
one, and happily the school thrashing as a method of separating the
chaff from
the wheat in boy nature is a thing of the past. The list of milder punishments was a varied one. If the master saw two boys whispering, he would, if circumstances favored, steal up to them from behind and visit unexpected retribution on the guilty lads by catching them by the collars and cracking their heads together. Frequently an offender was ordered out on the floor to stand for a time by the master’s desk, or he was sent to a corner with his face to the wall, or was asked to stand on one leg for a time, or he was assigned a passage of Scripture and told to stay after school until he had learned and recited it correctly to the teacher. In certain cases he was made to hold one arm out at right angles to his body — a very easy and simple thing to do for a short time, but fraught with painful discomfort if long continued. Sometimes this punishment was made doubly hard by forcing the scholar to support a book or other weight at the same time. When the arm began to sag, the teacher would inquire with feigned solicitude what the trouble was, and perhaps would give the boy a rap on his “crazy bone” with the ruler to encourage him to persevere. This process soon brought a child to tears, and then the teacher was apt to relent and send him to his seat. A punishment. Making
a girl sit with the boys, or a boy with the girls, was another
punishment. The
severity of this depended on the nature of the one punished. For the
timid and
bashful it was a terrible disgrace. Some
of the punishments produced very striking spectacular effects, to which
the
present-day mind would feel quite averse. Fancy the sight of a boy and
girl
guilty of some misdemeanor standing in the teacher’s heavy armchair,
the girl
wearing the boy’s hat and the boy adorned with the girl’s sunbonnet.
Both are
red-faced and tearful with mortified pride. They preserve with
difficulty a
precarious balance on their narrow footing, and every movement of one
causes
the other to gasp and to clutch hastily to prevent inglorious downfall.
To sit on the end of a ruler, which the teacher presently knocked from under the boy, was considered by some pedagogs an effective punishment. One master used to have the offending youngster bend over with his head under the table. Then the teacher whacked the culprit from behind with his heavy ruler, and sent him shooting under the table and sprawling across the floor. Another schoolmaster kept in the entry an old satchel which he would bring in on occasion, throw it on the floor, and order the offender to lie down with that for a pillow. Among the most ingenious and uncomfortable in the varied list of punishments was the fitting a cut from a green twig, partially split, to the offender’s nose. In cases of lying, this rude pair of pinchers was attached to the scholar’s tongue. The boys of the school go for a boat-ride. As
an example of the brutal extreme to which some masters went, I cite the
case of
a teacher who threatened on occasion to cut off the children’s ears.
Imagine
the whole school listening with breathless and open-eyed horror while
the
master, sitting in his chair with a little girl standing before him, is
explaining the process of ear-cutting, and at the same time whetting
his knife
on his stout boot. He would go so far as to rise and rub the back of
the blade
along the child’s ears. The scholars soon saw he was not to be
believed, but
the threat was too frightful to altogether lose its dread, however
often
repeated. The
women teachers were often as vigorous disciplinarians as the men, and
capable
of originating methods of their own that were truly distressing. For
instance,
one teacher would have the smaller offenders put out their tongues,
which she
would proceed to snap with a bit of whalebone. Oh, how that hurt! This
punishment seemed to them the meanest that could be invented. Boxing
ears, keeping in at recess or after school, and the confiscation of
playthings
which hindered the youthful mind in its pursuit of knowledge were mild
visitations of the law that only need mention. Jack-knives frequently
figured
among the contraband articles locked in the teacher’s desk; for what
boy can
behold a piece of soft pine wood in any shape whatever without desiring
to
whittle it? The desks offered an inviting surface on which the boy
itched to
carve his initials, and that done, he was inspired to put a few added
touches
and simple designs on the rest of the space within reach. If the
beloved
jack-knife was captured by the teacher and held in durance, the boy
still had
recourse to his pencils, and with these could make in the soft wood
various
indentations and markings pleasing to his soul. In
describing the schoolroom interior, only one chair was mentioned; but
there was
another which had long since seen its best days and was now minus its
back. On
it the boy who did not learn his lessons was sometimes required to sit
with a
fool’s cap on his head. This treatment was expected not only to shame
the boy,
but to serve as a warning example to the school. His cap was usually
improvised
by the teacher out of a sheet of white paper or even a newspaper. Some
teachers, however, had a fool’s cap ready made. One such cap that was
particularly elaborate had a tassel on top and tassels at each of the
three
corners below, and on its front was painted the word “DUNCE” in large
capitals.
The
games of the children were much the same as those of earlier days. In
winter
there was a good deal of rough skirmishing among the boys, snowballing
and
ducking each other when chance offered. The small children at times
fared
hardly, and once in a while a girl had a severe experience when her
mates took
a notion to wrap her in her long cloak and bury her in a snowdrift. As
soon as
the burying was accomplished, the buryers would run away, and the
buried would
struggle out half suffocated and bedraggled with snow from head to
foot.
“Snap-the-whip” was a popular game when the snow was deep. The
children, except
the one most concerned, thought it great fun, and shouted in glee every
time
the whip snapped and the little end boy or girl broke loose to spin
head over
heels into a drift. On
stormy winter days, when the children all brought their dinners and the
teacher
was not there, the excited racing and tearing around that was done in
the
little room at noon gave a vivid though unconscious representation of
Babel and
Bedlam. At the same time there was a good deal of running in and out,
and the
floor by schooltime was mottled all over with snow and water. Sliding
was in order when there was a crust on the snow. The sleds were great
home-made
affairs that three or four could sit on if need be. Sleds were usually
shod
with hard-wood runners, but some boys went to the blacksmith’s and had
their
sleds fitted with runners of iron. The boy owner of a sled was
expected, on the
downhill trips, to sit behind and steer. With his square-toed boot
grating
along behind he could make the sled go just where he pleased. In good
sliding
weather boot-toes disappeared wonderfully fast, and he was a lucky
fellow whose
footwear did not begin to gape at the extremities before spring.
Presently some
genius invented a copper-toed boot, which no doubt “filled a long-felt
want,”
for the inventor realized a fortune by it. Children
who could not afford a sled would make something that served instead
out of
barrel staves. Three or four staves laid close together did for the
bottom, and
as many more bowed over above did for the top. The ends of the staves
where
they met were nailed together, and the staves were also nailed to a
brace run
through the middle of the contrivance. Favorite
summer games were tag, drop-the-handkerchief, puss-in-the-corner, and,
most
popular of any, there Playing drop the handkerchief. He
should have said, “I spy,” but that was contrary to the established
custom. The
girls jumped rope a good deal. They would jump to and from school, and
at
recess would try to see who could jump the most without missing. In
fact, they
jumped until they were exhausted. The
surroundings of the schoolhouse were half wild and contained many
delightful
possibilities for pleasure. A little way down the road was a large
tree, under
which in summer the children played cubbyhouse. Near by was a
good-sized brook
bordered by brushy woods, and in the thickets the little folks gathered
patches
of green moss, with which they would cover a square of earth under the
tree;
and that was the foundation of the cubbyhouse. They brought from home
broken
pieces of dishes, bits of carpet, and other odds and ends for furniture
and
houseware. Acorn cups did for tea-cups, and the children made fancy
little
pails out of brown oak balls by cutting off a portion, hollowing out
the rest,
and fixing in a slender leaf stem for a handle. With some short pieces
of board
they contrived shelves for the dishes. In connection with the
cubbyhouses they
made some small inclosures and caught toads and put them in these pens.
They
called the toads their pigs. The older scholars played they were
parents and
had the smaller ones for their children, though to some extent they
brought
their dolls to serve in this capacity. Most
of the children came so far they had to take their dinners. In
pleasant, warm
weather they ate at the cubbyhouses. They carried their food in tin
pails, and
often entertained themselves by swapping portions with each other. Of
all the playtime resorts the favorite was the brook, just across the
road from
the schoolhouse. In winter they scampered over to it at recess and got
bits of
ice which they would smuggle into the schoolroom and secrete and nibble
at on
the sly. In summer they waded and splashed in the shallows of the
stream and
caught pollywogs and minnows with their bare hands. Perhaps
the most striking use they ever made of the stream was to play at
baptizing in
it. The chief church of the town was of the Baptist denomination, and
it was
the custom to baptize converts in some convenient stream. When a
ceremony was
to take place, the minister and convert, both in black robes, walked
down into
the stream, while the rest of the congregation clustered on the shore,
singing:
— “On Jordan’s stormy bank
I stand
And cast a wistful eye To Canaan’s fair and happy land, Where my possessions lie.” Then
the minister took hold of his companion and said, “I baptize thee in
the name
of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.” With
these words he laid the convert over backward into the water. If it was
winter
and the stream was frozen, a passage was cut through the ice from the
shore
into deep enough water to do the baptizing thoroughly. To persons
unfamiliar
with such customs this may sound rude and strange, but to most in that
vicinity
the ceremony was as impressive as it was interesting. The children in their play copied all the details of the baptism, very closely, except that the girl who acted as convert was not immersed in the water, but only dabbled a little. In the meadow at recess. |