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Second Home
A01=Sue Thomas
African Americans
Author_Sue Thomas
Category=JNLB
colonial
community
dame schools
denominational schools
diaries
early statehood
education
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
firsthand accounts
frontier
history
James Milton Turner
John Berry Meachum
one-room schoolhouse
oral histories
pioneers
post-civil war
public education
subscription schools
teachers
teaching methods
territorial
Product details
- ISBN 9780826216694
- Weight: 333g
- Dimensions: 154 x 228mm
- Publication Date: 01 Aug 2006
- Publisher: University of Missouri Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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The one-room schoolhouse may be a thing of the past, but it is the foundation on which modern education rests. Sue Thomas now traces the progress of early education in Missouri, demonstrating how important early schools were in taming the frontier. ""A Second Home"" offers an in-depth and entertaining look at education in the days when pioneers had to postpone schooling for their children until they could provide shelter for their families and clear their fields for crops, while well-to-do families employed tutors or sent their children back east. Thomas tells of the earliest known English school at the Ramsay settlement near Cape Girardeau, then of the opening of a handful of schools around the time of the Louisiana Purchase - such as Benjamin Johnson's school on Sandy Creek, Christopher Schewe's boy's school when St. Louis was still a village, and the Ste. Genevieve Academy, where poor and Indian children were to be taught free of charge. She describes how, as communities grew, more private schools opened - including ""dame schools,"" denominational schools, and subscription schools - until public education came into its own in the 1850s. Drawing on oral histories collected throughout the state, as well as private diaries and archival research, the book is full of firsthand accounts of what education once was like - including descriptions of the furnishings, teaching methods, and school-day activities in one-room log schools. It also includes the experiences of former slaves and free blacks following the Civil War when they were newly entitled to public education, with discussions of the contributions of John Berry Meachum, James Milton Turner, and other African American leaders. With its remembrances of simpler times, ""A Second Home"" tells of community gatherings in country schools and events such as taffy pulls and spelling bees, and offers tales of stern teachers, student pranks, and schoolyard games. Accompanying illustrations illuminate family and school life in the colonial, territorial, early statehood, and post - Civil War periods. For readers who recall older family members' accounts or who are simply fascinated by the past, this is a book that will conjure images of a bygone time while opening a new window on Missouri history.
SUE THOMAS, a former elementary school teacher, is a freelance writer whose other books include The Poetry Pad, Curtain I, Curtain II, and the historical fiction novel for preteens Secesh. She lives in Kansas City.
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