Having lived for many years in Denver, Colorado, I was shocked
to learn that Aspen, an expensive mountain retreat, had begun as a mining camp.
As late as 1885, the editor of the Aspen Times begged citizens to plant trees around their homes, out of
civic pride and to create beauty; and to think ahead. Schools, transportation and better roads were
desperately needed. A contemporary
author, Louise Palmer, described this dilemma satirically in the May, 1869
Overland Monthly, using Virginia City, Nevada as an example.
My article is an overview.
Not every mining town was based on work, saloons and gambling. Every community relied on their residents’
expectations and demands. While Virginia City, Nevada, according to Ms. Palmer
and the scholars at UNL, was lawless, noisy and wild, a town neighboring Virginia City prided
itself on its mines, churches, schools and clean streets.
The mining communities were first of all transitory and each
town’s leaders faced the residents’ indifference. Louise Palmer’s story is drenched with indifference
(and boredom). The professional men,
like her husband, were ‘mere money-making machines.’ And ‘the ladies’ were accustomed to their
roles as beauties wearing silks and jewels, eating ices and other delicacies, each
spending most of her time alone. No one wanted to return to their homes in the East
and be ‘normal.’ Ms. Palmer wrote that ‘no
man who has ever breathed the air of excitement and speculation of Nevada can
live and be content’ in the dimly-remembered East. Even she loved the raucous, vigorous town.
As in Aspen, the town governments gave their citizens a
choice: remain transitory, and do not have taxes for roads, schools and
sanitation. Become a town to settle in,
and pay a bit.
Schools and teachers
In 1845 Catherane Beecher published a call to literate women,
The Duty of American Women to their
Country. She demanded that young women
go West and teach because the population of school- aged children was steadily
increasing and would soon exceed the number of teachers. It was the young women’s choice: to allow the children to grow up without
schools, or go out and change this.
The following figures support Ms. Beecher’s warning about the
growing number of students.
In 1860, Nebraska had 7,041 school-aged children. In 1870, the number was 32,589. In 1882, there were 165,559 school-aged
children.
Towns in the West began to advertise in Boston and other
cities, asking for single ladies to teach in their schools who promised not to
marry for three years. Sometimes the ads
asked for one hundred or more teachers.
Ms. Beecham exhorted young women teachers to be both school
teachers and missionaries. But the towns
did not expect, or perhaps want, their teachers to follow her advice. Teachers’
wages were based upon the number of pupils, and teachers found that being part
of the community was better. Teachers entered the extended family of the settlement.
They ‘boarded out’ with a different child’s family each day or week, and
the town provided a room for her. (There were male school teachers, but not
enough, and their wages were slightly higher.)
However, as settlements became larger, classes grew. One
teacher per 60-70 children of differing abilities in one small cabin was normal. Teachers taught basic school courses such as reading,
writing, and math; the women teachers gave instruction in sewing, a survival tool
for the girls. They also guided their
students about sanitation, sometimes demanding toilets and repairs from the
school board.
In settlements, adult education was often well-managed. For
example, Oscar Wilde, Emerson, Thoreau and Hawthorne, to name a few,
individually traveled lecture circuits throughout the West. There were also lyceums available, and many
towns took advantage of this, having at first local residents offering
discussions; and later, the lyceums paid outside celebrities (authors, critics,
farm and ranch experts, etc.) to give presentations.
Some records, but not all, indicate that libraries were only
to be found in townships over 10,000 people. There were library boards who kept
pace with the town’s intellectual needs.
There were also drama societies, where Ben Johnson, Shakespeare and
others were regularly performed by professional actors who traveled on a
circuit. In addition, classical music
and operas were in demand. Records show that this emphasis on education came
from high in the government; others emphasize that citizens themselves were ‘starved’
for learning.
Women after 1862 in the West were able to achieve higher
learning because of the Morrill Act. The
Act granted land for colleges that taught agricultural and mechanical subjects,
but it also mandated that these schools be coeducational. Women’s enrollment in
Normal Schools (Teachers’ Colleges, some of which granted B.A.’s) soon exceeded
the men’s.
Like the Homestead Act, which offered land to women, the
West offered women hard work as teachers – and more education and freedom for
themselves.
*
References
Great Plains Quarterly 1988. Prairie Schoolwomen Mid- 1850s to 1920s,
in Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska (UNL Digital Commons)
The Gentle Tamers: Women of the Old Wild West By Dee Brown
ColoradoMagazine_v44n2_Spring1967.pdf.
Mining Camps: Myth vs. Reality by Duane Allen Smith
Louise Palmer. "How We Live in Nevada." May, 1869 Overland Monthly
So Much to be Done: Women Settlers on the Mining and Ranching Frontier.
Edited by Ruth B. Moynihan, Susan Armitage and Christiane Fischer
Dichamp
Encyclopedia Britannica: Lyceums and the Chatauqua Movement
The Female Frontier. A Comparative View of Women on the Prairie and the
Plains by Glenda Riley
US Library of Congress: railroad maps; history of fabrics
and ready- made women’s clothing
Happy as a Big Sunflower: Adventures in the West, 1876-1880. Diaries of
Rolf Johnson. Edited by Richard
E. Jensen
I had no idea the population of students grew so rapidly in only 20 years. This article was really interesting Cora. I had a teacher heroine in the back of my mind and this helps orient the story.
ReplyDeleteThanks for an interesting article on the development and growth of education in 19th century west.
ReplyDelete