Do you remember all your grade school teachers? Although it’s been 62 years since I was in
the first grade, I can remember all my teachers, some, of course, better than
others. Mrs. Krute taught the first
grade, Miss Unger the second, Mrs. Rhoades, the third, Mrs. McDonald the
fourth, and Miss Moorman the fifth and sixth both. Mannford didn’t have a kindergarten back
then.
The elementary classes were on the north side of the school
and, as I recall, there were four classrooms there. Miss Moorman’s combination class was located
upstairs in the center part of the building.
If my memory on this is faulty, correct me the next time you see me.
Mrs. Krute and Miss Unger both left after I completed their
grades. I don’t know whether I had
anything to do with that or not, I certainly hope not! They were followed by Miss Hart and Mrs.
O’Kieefe who wound up staying at Mannford for several years.
Mrs. Rhoades, my third grade teacher, was the wife of Lester
Rhoades, the Mannford Postmaster, and she was quite a disciplinarian (or so I
thought). By the time I reached 50 years
of age, I got to where I could call her Sylvia.
In later years, after I was grown and had children of my own, my mother
and father would go camping at New Mannford Ramp with Lester and Sylvia.
Mrs. McDonald, our fourth grade teacher, was extremely
relaxed and easy going and all the children loved her. She was the widow of Dr. Clarence McDonald,
one of Mannford’s early doctors. He had
passed away in the late 1940’s so she had been widowed for a long time.
Miss Moorman taught both the fifth and sixth grades and did
it quite well. With two classes in one
room, she had to be the ultimate disciplinarian and she was! Once, during class, she grabbed hold of me,
lifted me out of my chair and gave me a really good spanking. While she was doing that, I was protesting
that I hadn’t done anything! Her
response: “That’s just it, you weren’t doing anything!”
When I got my last report card of the year in the fifth
grade in 1957, I was mortified to see a “D” in one of my subjects (I don’t even
remember which one now) for the last six weeks.
I knew that when I got home with that report card I was going to be in
trouble! While we were waiting out in
front of the school for the bus, I saw a big pipe at the gate to the school and
I stuffed that report card down in it.
When I got home, I told my mother that I had lost my report card but
that all the grades were OK (I wonder if she believed me).
In the summer of 1957, Dad found out that the company he
worked for had been sold and was moving to Pampa, Texas. So, I didn’t get to complete grade school in
Mannford. In preparation for the move,
Mom told me that we would have to get a copy of my report card! When we went up to the school office to get
the copy, the secretary put down only the semester grades; the “D” I had gotten
did not show up. I was the luckiest kid
in Mannford that day!
I don’t remember exactly how many kids were in
each of our grades but it was in the area of 25. The other day, we participated in a vision
screening at the elementary school; there were five to six classes for each
grade and each class had about 25 students.
My, how things have changed.
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