Schools
Through the Years
By
Lou Hunsinger Jr.
Multi-million
dollar physical plants, computer labs, swimming pools,
gymnasiums and various bits of audiovisual equipment make
a modern day school in Lycoming County a virtual palace
of learning, but it wasn’t always this way.
The
first schools in Lycoming County had the humblest of origins.
The first schoolhouse in Lycoming County was built in
what is now Moreland Township in 1796. Another one-room
school was built on the same site in 1872 called the “Eight
Square School.” The Muncy Historical Society has restored
it.
That
first school was built of rough-hewn logs and had grease-paper
windows, not unlike the type of school that Abraham Lincoln
may have attended. The only books used at this school
were the New Testament, “Dilworth’s Speller” and a basic
arithmetic book.
Schools
began to pop up throughout Lycoming County as it became
further settled. The one-room schoolhouse era began in
earnest with the passage by the state legislature of the
“Common School Act” in 1834, which formalized the establishment
of schools throughout the state.
These
schools were not always the best of facilities. According
to a report by county superintendent of schools to the
state supervisor of common schools, quoted in a March
24, 1866 article in the “West Branch Bulletin,” “There
are 195 schoolhouses in Lycoming County, 43 of which are
unfit for school purposes, though used for such. Of six
new ones built in the county during this year, only one
came up to a suitable standard…” The report continued,
“47 teachers were examined privately, most of whom would
not have become licensed had there been such an urgent
demand for teachers.”
According
to “The One-Room School—Lycoming County’s Legacy,"
a publication written by the Junior League in the early
1970s, accounts from the late 19th century
show that teaching in those days was often just a steppingstone
to other jobs. Teachers were not paid well and were not
held in high regard by the community. The schools were
drafty and cold in the winter and stuffy and hot in the
warmer months.
The
one-room schools were the staple of education for many
years. The last of the one-room schools in the area closed
in June 1967. They were the Rose Valley School and the
Beech Valley School.
A
teacher in 1898 made a monthly salary of $50. By the early
1920s it was between $55 and $75. By the early 1950s it
had risen to $250.
In
Williamsport, according to a publication called, “Williamsport
Schools Through the Years,” published in 1958, the earliest
school was set up in Newberry, on Arch Street, across
from the Lycoming Presbyterian Church.
The
first Williamsport High School was organized in 1869 on
Fourth Street, between Elmira and Hepburn streets. Later
a building was constructed at the southeast corner of
Third and Walnut streets. This building burned in April
1914. The high school edifice best remembered is the one
at the corner of West Third and Susquehanna, the site
now of the Pennsylvania College of Technology. It was
the high school from the fall of 1914 until the spring
of 1972.
At
one time there were a dozen elementary schools in Williamsport.
That number has shrunk to just three. The switching from
a junior high school system to one of middle schools had
a major impact on this shrinkage, as well as declining
enrollment numbers.
From
1854 until the late 1950s a superintendent of schools
for Lycoming County schools existed. The first one was
J.W. Barnes. There were several men who held this position
whose influence was far reaching.
Charles
Lose may have been the most influential. He held that
job from 1885 to 1891 and was recognized statewide for
his efforts to promote and improve education. He presided
over a period in which the schools were greatly modernized
and streamlined, raising the standards for teachers and
for teaching in the county.
Another
very influential superintendent was J. George Becht, who
was superintendent from 1893 to 1902. He pioneered the
development of libraries for schools in the rural areas
of the county. He also presided over an expansion in school
growth and building construction.
Lycoming
County schools have evolved from a period in which education
was available to only a few children to the present in
which thousands are educated.