Miss Bessie Stevens
Just A Country Schoolteacher
By Mary Trotter Kion
Bessie Stevens was a tall, gaunt woman.
Her sallow-hued features and dark hair left little to admire in
the way of attractiveness. She was not famous, nor was her life
ever recorded in any history book that I am aware of. Miss Stevens
was simply a country schoolteacher in a small, one-roomed Missouri
schoolhouse called Pilot Knob. And like most teachers, over the
long years past, she has been nearly forgotten, but not quiet.
A lot of unkind remarks were made about
Bessie, especially about her appearance. At one time she attempted
to persuade the school board to provide a horse for her to ride
back and forth to school on. Her request was denied even though
one member of the board was a wealthy raiser of horses. This incident
provided just one more occasion to make an unkind remark about
the schoolmarm. It went rather like this: If the school board
provided Bessie with a horse there would be no problem with her
getting on it. She was so tall all she'd have to do is stand there
and let the horse run right under her. Such was the fate of poor
Bessie Stevens.
Whether or not she was a good teacher
is probably in the mind of the beholder. Of all the grubby farm
kids that attended her classes there is, to my knowledge, no record
of any of them killing each other or their teacher. They all learned
to read, do sums, perform opening prayers, and sing a variety
of songs. They all knew the words to the Pledge of Allegiance,
and Heaven help them if they didn't.
On cold winter mornings, when the last
snowfall had reached the tops of the fence posts, Bessie had a
hot fire going in the old black pop-bellied stove that heated
the schoolroom. And there was usually a pot of something simmering
on top of the stove to warm a bunch of hungry stomachs at noon.
This was sheer luxury, and the school could even brag of an outhouse
that sported several holes. There was no waiting in line at that
establishment.
World War II hadn't long been over at
this time, and years later I've wondered, and imagined, if in
Miss Stevens' past there had been a fallen hero pilot who went
to his reward far from home with Bessie's name on his dying lips.
But that's a secret that only Bessie may have known.
In reality, she taught school day after
day for nine months of the year to students that ranged from those
in the first grade to those in the eighth grade. Some years a
grade might be missing due to no children available of that particular
age and/or status. There were no snow-days, when school busses
could not maneuver icy roads, to give her a reprieve. There were
no school busses. You either rode a horse to school, or as Miss
Stevens traveled-by your own two God-given feet.
Her students varied as much in personality
as in grade level from one year to the next. In one particular
year there were twin girls in about the fifth grade. These two
young ladies were pretty, buxom farm lasses. Their older brother
was the school bully and surely gave Miss Stevens many an angry
worry. Another girl was in his grade. She being a slight-built
and studious child was usually the brunt of the boy's brutish
antics. In all, there were usually about twelve children who spent
their daytime hours under Bessie's watchful eyes and instruction.
One year there was only a single child
in the first grade. She was a little five-year-old who hated Miss
Stevens with all the fervor her blue eyes and pink pouting lips
could muster. Bessie liked to teach the younger students to read
by presenting them with a collection of little thin pink blocks
that had words printed on them. The idea was to arrange these
blocks in order that they made sentences. This particular little
pale blond-haired devil thought she had a better idea.
One by one, the child proceeded to destroy
the little pink blocks and toss them on the floor. For some reason
unknown to this little girl, who would have rather been outside
climbing trees, Miss Stevens didn't like this use of her word
blocks. Had it not been for the intervention of the little girl's
older sister, the child would have received her first, and well-deserved,
spanking from Old Bessie. The real problem was that the little
girl just didn't care to learn to read, or to know anything else
that came out of a hateful book. But Bessie Stevens had more than
one method for encouraging her students to learn.
It was rather amazing when the teacher
suggested the little girl memorize a story in one of her reading
books and act it out for the parent-teacher's meeting. With rapid
skill the child learned the story by heart and did the performance
to a grand parental applause. It was not until many years later
that the little girl realized she'd fallen very neatly into that
old teacher's trap.
Miss Stevens' talent, or tricks, for
teaching didn't end there where the little girl was concerned.
When she suggested the child learn a song about teddy bears having
a picnic and sing it at the next parent-teacher's meeting the
child agreed. The thought of performing and being the center of
attention once again outshone the hard fact that she'd have to
"read" the words of the song to learn it. But learn it she did,
and sing the song she did while her mother played the piano and
another young student, a city to country transplanted boy, tap
danced.
This little girl grew up to be very
thankful for all dedicated teachers, especially a stern, gaunt,
unlovely teacher named Bessie Stevens in a long-ago one-roomed,
Missouri schoolhouse called Pilot Knob. I know all this for certain
because this writer was, and is, that little girl who didn't want
to learn to read.
Mary Trotter Kion spends her time reading,
researching, and writing about historical person and events,
especially notable women. At the present time, while researching
and writing a five-volume historical novel concerning a
Virginia slave woman who travels to the Far West, Mary writes
various articles for the Internet. She is also designing
a web site to showcase her articles on Western Women and
what their lives were like as they traveled west and lived
in the various western regions in the 1800s. She may be
reached at webwomanwest@aol.com |