The first of two segments from an article written by Iva M. Tipton
about 1985.
Published in the Mackay Miner News paper.
The Bog Lost River Valley is a long narrow
valley comprised mostly of cattle ranches and farms. As the land was taken
into private ownership, communities sprang up. One of their first plans
was for education for their children. Many one-room schools, were established,
all within walking distance or a short ride on horseback.
Starting up at the head of Big Lost River
there was the Riverside school, a log building which is still standing.
Across the river at the old stage station
of Houston is a log building that served as a school for many years . It
too was made into a home when it was no longer used as a school.
Down river from Houston, on the same side
of the river, was the Alder Creek two-room school. Finally the extra
room was made into living quarters for teacher and her family of small
children. Local attendance had dwindled to below state requirements, and
these extra children were needed to bring attendance up enough to hold
school. After consolidation, the building was sawed into two parts and
moved to a farm and moved to a farm, where one part was made into a nice
farm dwelling.
There was also a school at Leslie, which sometimes
had two teachers. They to, consolidated with the Mackay schools.
Farther south, on the county line, ws the
Pass Creek school--a one room frame building. Upon consolidation this building
was brought to the Mackay school grounds and used for an extra classroom.
When it was not being used for a classroom it was used by college geology
students as a summer camp.
Darlington, too had a school; a two room little
red school house.
On Antelope Creek, there were two joint districts
because the creek was the county line with school property in both Butte
and Custer counties.
The Bell school on lower Antelope served well
until burned one night. The teacher had banked the fire that night and
it got out of hand.
Up the creek about four miles was the Sunnyside
School. The building still stands. One Halloween there was a costume dance
at the school. The teacher, a young man, was dressed as a hobo. Under his
arm he carried a burlap bag with a live
red hen in it, with her head stuck out of the hole in the sack. The
teacher never danced at all-- just circulated among the dancers, entertaining
them with his red hen.
Eleven miles from the highway is the Grouse
school. Is survived until just a few years ago. Now the bus brings all
the Antelope school children to Arco.
Consolidation marked the end of the one-room
schools. Buses bring the children from Dickey, Chilly, Barton to Mackay;
they also come in from the Custer County line at Darlington to Mackay.
At Chilly stood a sturdy cement block building,
which had a big bell to call the children to class. Most schools had only
a little hand bell which made a pretty ting-a-ling sound. The teacher and
students were startled one day to hear a commotion outside the building.
A traveling circus was passing by, and a truck carrying two elephants
had over turned right in front of the school house. Not much attention
was
paid to studies the remainder of the day. the building was later dismantled
block by block, and the usable lumber in it was also salvaged. All the
material was taken out of the valley to be used again.
A few miles down the river on Barton Flat
was a two-room brick building. Only one teacher ws employed here. In bad
weather, the second room was a play room. Community dances were held here
with local musicians keeping feet flying with the Waltz, the Virginia Reel,
and square dances.
South of Mackay was the Franklin District
school. At first it ws a one-room log building with double desks. One well
remembered day there was a great crash at the back of the building. Some
pieces of the blackboards flew out among the pupils, some pieces of small
boards lay on the desks. One eighth grade boy who irrigating boots leaped
over the desks on his way to the door. No one was hurt. A team of horses
pulling a wagon had run away and hit the building with the wagon tongue
like a battering ram.
About 1920 a bond election was held to build
a new school house. It was a tough fight with feelings running high.
The vote was close, but favorable, and a new school house was built.
The widows were all on the south side of the building --a new idea. The
first eighth grade class graduated from the new building in the spring
of 1922. School was held there for a number of years until the district
was consolidated with the Mackay schools. The building sat idle for
many years until it was
remodeled into a farm house. This school house ws the meeting
place of the Grange, a farmer's organization, for many years. Many good
times were had here when the had box socials, plays with local talent,
and the very enjoyable dances to local music.
About the author: Iva M. Tipon, presently historian for the South
Custer Historical Society, Acme to the Valley in 1913 as a four year old
and grew up on the family farm in what is now the Leslie area off the Pass
Creek road. She attended the Franklin School there.