Visitors
to the Windham Historical Society’s Grand Opening of the Village School on
Saturday, August 25th, got a glimpse of the past – and a look at the
future, with a preview of the program that will be available to area elementary
schools in 2019.
Abigail Wheeler reads from the "McGuffey Reader" |
After
extensive research, the society transformed a former gun shop into an authentic
replica of a one-room school house. Materials were salvaged from old schools in
the area, and the schoolhouse is arranged precisely as it would have been in
the late 1800s.
Replicas of the “McGuffey Readers” that were used for teaching
lessons sit alongside slates for “ciphering” (solving arithmetic problems) on
desks much like those that would have been found in a classroom in that time. Benches are arranged along the walls, where
students might have a “spelldown.” There’s even a chair with a dunce cap in the
corner, and a dot on the wall, which students would be required to place their
noses against and stand for punishment.
The
goal of the society is to bring a living history experience to students in
Windham and other schools in the region. “We’re interested in not passive
history, but participatory history,” said member Walter Lunt at the grand
opening presentation.
Teachers
throughout the Lakes Region will be invited to bring their students to
experience a day in the life of a student in 1898. “We don’t want to be a frill
in the curriculum,” Lunt, who taught for 30 years, said. “If you’re studying
history, we want to become part of your unit. We want to blend. We’ll even
adapt what we do to a degree, to meet your goals and objectives.” Teachers will
also be given a packet in advance to prepare students for the experience.
Society
members will play the schoolmarm or schoolmaster, and students will spend
two-hours learning about current events in 1898 and being taught lessons of
that time. Participants will be dressed as those in 1898 would have dressed,
and students will be given names of actual scholars in Windham schools during
that time period.
By
just after noon on Saturday, the grand opening event had seen 40 to 50 visitors
pass through, and members had given three presentations, complete with skits that
demonstrated what visiting students will experience. Abigail Wheeler, 8 1/2,
from Hollis attended the event with her family. Her mother, Amanda Wheeler,
said they home school, and this event tied into what they have been learning
about. They attended the event because, “We wanted to have history kind of come
alive,” she said.
Abigail,
who came in period costume, said the presentation was “cool.”
According
to Lunt, the society will do two practice runs of the program this fall, with
third grade classes from Windham Primary School. In the spring, the program
will be offered to all schools in the region.
The schoolhouse is the first building to open in the society’s Village
Green living history center. For more information, or to donate, contact the
Windham Historical Society at 20-892-1433, info@windhamhistorical.org,
or visit their website at www.windhamhistorical.org.
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