By
Walter Lunt
The
two colleagues met in the teachers’ room at Windham High School during the
opening weeks of the 1963 – 64 school year; it was Earl Pike’s first year of
teaching.
He
exchanged pleasantries with retired teacher Marion Hodgdon, who was a
substitute teacher that day.
Pike
told her, “I teach mathematics,” to which Hodgdon replied, “No, you do not.”
Puzzled,
Pike rejoined, “Yes, I do. I teach mathematics.”
“No,
you teach children. You teach students.” came the sharp rebuke, as
Hodgdon stared back with the confident, knowing look of 50 years teaching
experience.
“She was correct,” said Pike, who now lives in
Casco, “and that was a lesson (I never forgot) for my next 30 years of teaching
at Windham High School.”
Hodgdon
was born on Oct. 18, 1889 in Windham in what is commonly referred to as the old
“Lorenzen house,” next to Field Allen School. In her autobiography, written in
the early 1960s, she explained that she attended Windham High School, located
at that time in what is now the Windham Historical Society’s Town House Museum
on Windham Center Road, graduating in 1906. Hodgdon wrote that she knew
early-on she wanted to be a teacher, possibly inspired by her early years
attending a one-room schoolhouse at Windham Center. “I have (only) pleasant
memories of those early years,” wrote Hodgdon.
Following
high school, four girls from the graduating class of six students would attend
Gorham Normal School, graduating in 1908.
Hodgdon
secured her first teaching job at the Ireland School in East Windham. “It was a
real challenge, with all grades from the beginners to the ones preparing for
high school – about twenty-five (lessons) a day. I received eight dollars a
week.”
At
the end of her fourth year at Ireland, Hodgdon was transferred to Friends
School, another one-room school located on the corner of Gray Road (route 202)
and Swett Road. The move included a pay raise: $10 per week. She called it, “a
great advancement.”
One
year later, another promotion. Hodgdon was assigned the principalship at a
North Windham schoolhouse, along with a whopping 20% raise. She now earned $12
a week, which was the top of the pay scale in Windham and in most Maine
districts.
Seeking
a boost in salary, Hodgdon moved out of state and spent the next few years
teaching in Vermont and Massachusetts. “I left for greener fields doing
departmental work…specializing in English and history in what was soon to be
known as junior high.”
By
1923, Hodgdon said she believed she had “reached my (career) goal,” and was
ready to come home. She returned to Windham and became a switchboard operator
at the Windham Center telephone office.
That
same year Marion married Howard Hodgdon and moved to Portland where the family
“increased to five, (so) there was plenty to do at home.” She would also be a substitute
in the Portland schools.
By
1934, the lure of her home town brought the family back to Windham. “Windham
has always been a progressive town and has always been proud of its schools. I
had the privilege of serving on the school board (for) three years. I never
regretted the decision to return.”
The
Hodgdon’s bought and restored an old home at Windham Center. On the property
were the
remains of the ancient Parish Church – abandoned, tattered and
crumbling. Considering it an eyesore and safety hazard, the Hodgdon’s proceeded
to tear it down. But, to many town residents, razing a church bordered on
blasphemy. The church came down, but the resulting controversy was troubling
for the family. Marion would avoid many opportunities to mingle in the
community, preferring to, as she would often say, “mind my own business.” Two
exceptions were a garden club and involvement in her town’s storied history.
“She
had a green thumb,” observed grandson Alan Hodgdon, Jr.; she favored violets
and geraniums. Beyond family, gardening and reading (especially Thoreau), local
history was a passion. She was heavily involved in the town’s five-day 200th
birthday celebration in 1938, helping to publish a thick booklet called “Windham
Invites You”, and heading up the
pageant committee.
By
the outbreak of World War II, Marion and Howard’s children had grown. Two
attended college and became teachers. Their son, Kermit, remained in Windham
where he became a well-known and highly respected member of the community. In
1947, Howard died after a sickness of several months. Given her exemplary
reputation as a teacher, Marion was asked to become part of the new school
consolidation. “I consented to try it for a few weeks. These weeks developed
into sixteen years.”
It
was during those years that Hodgdon was given the nickname “White Fury” by her
students. Over her many years of classroom experience, particularly the early
ones in a one-room schoolhouse, she had devised a no-nonsense code of
discipline. “She had white hair and a low tolerance for people who didn’t
follow rules. You never acted up in her class.” said grandson Kermit, Jr.
Her
passion for local history led her to teach the eighth grade course in Windham
history. The textbook, “A History of Windham, Maine” by Frederick H. Dole had been written in conjunction with the 1938
bi-centennial.
Shortly
before Hodgdon retired in 1960, the Windham School Committee eliminated the
Windham history course (doubtless in response to the education scare prompted
by the Soviet Union launch of Sputnik). One of her students recalls Mrs.
Hodgdon’s anger over the move. “She came to U.S.
History class on the first
day. She asked if Windham, Maine was in the United States? We all nodded yes.
She then proceeded to pass out the Windham history texts.”
Windham
resident Ray Philpot said Hodgdon “turned on the light for me in liking
history. In school, year after year, all the history classes just seemed to
teach the same thing over and over, but she really sparked my interest. I’ve
been a local historian ever since.”
In
retirement, Marion Hodgdon was pressed into service numerous times as a
substitute teacher. It’s been said that the regular classroom teacher knew it
was folly to leave lesson plans for her. They would be ignored as Mrs. Hodgdon
preferred to replace them with Windham history lessons.
She
was twice honored by local organizations. High School principal Richard Dunn
called a special assembly where Hodgdon was named an honorary member of the
National Honor Society (she wore the gold pin often and with pride.)
In
1967, Windham Kiwanis honored her with a Senior Citizen Award that read, “In
Grateful Recognition of the many years of faithful work, unselfish effort and
dedicated service to this community.”
“She
was a career woman at a time when women were not encouraged to do that,”
observed granddaughter Brenda (Hodgdon) True, “she was a wonderful grandmother.
Growing up, we (the grandchildren) would often stay with her for days at a time
to keep her company and help out. She couldn’t sew a button, but we all
remember the molasses and peanut butter cookies.”
Marion
Hodgdon continued substitute teaching up to within a year of her death in 1975.
She was 86 and, said granddaughter True, “had a good life.”
Added
Kermit, Jr., “a teacher through and through.”
A
teacher’s teacher.