PROSPERITY SCHOOL DISTRICT No.2126
- In my second term of teaching at Hines Creek in the beautiful Peace River
- country, I received a touching letter from my widowed mother. “Please,
- Dear,” she wrote, “I think you should come to a school closer to home. The
- first thing we know you will marry a nice young fellow up there and we
- will never see you again.”
- After some consideration, I applied for a school in the Wainwright School
- Division #32 and was accepted. I was very fortunate to begin teaching at
- Prosperity School in September 1944.
- Let’s go back to another memorable year, 1910, for in February of that
- year, authorization was given making James Swan, W.O. Harris and Alex
- Ferguson trustees of a new school district, Prosperity! $800 was issued
- in debentures to cover the cost of the school, furniture and barn. One acre
- of land, SW ¼ 15-44-1 W 4th, was purchased from the C.P.R. at $33 an
- acre. The first mill rate was set at ten cents per acre.
- By August, all was ready for school to begin. Mr. James Cargill, a recent
- homesteader, was the first teacher hired with a salary of $630 per year.
- In the immediate following years, Judson Perry, A.L. Harmer and Miss
- Edna Clark received $720 per annum; the secretary received $25 and
- Reggie Harris was hired for $2.50 a month as janitor.
- Some important events and additions to the school are as follows:
- 1915 – a well was bored on the school premises and a foundation was put
- under the building.
- 1916 – the first paint job on the building was white with green trim.
- A secondhand six octave organ was bought.
- 1920 – the first telephone was installed. This caused a delicate situation
- when the constant ringing for the students on the part of the parents
- caused the teacher to plug the bells so classes wouldn’t be interrupted.
- The phone remained in the school.
- 1921 – five acres were purchased from I.E. Neil and added to the school
- grounds. Enrollment had grown and the school was a busy place with
- social activities.
- 1924 – Trees were planted around the yard. A curling rink was built,
- instigated by many enthusiastic curlers in Prosperity and surrounding
- districts. Response from the young people was overwhelming. The curling
- rink (one sheet of ice) brought busy days and nights and much pleasure to
- curlers and onlookers alike. It was originally lighted by gas lights hung
- along the length of the rink.
- 1928 – a full basement was put under the school. The curlers hosted
- many oyster suppers and the women put on sumptuous chicken dinners in
- the basement. People came from miles around to feast at these famous
- functions. A dance followed. Proceeds bought a beautiful hardwood floor
- for $75, a well-equipped kitchen and a piano.
- 1938 – a new furnace was installed for $188. Grade nine was taught
- with the approval of the inspector. Prosperity’s first trustee to the
- newly-formed Wainwright School Division #32 was W. Sewell.
- The local board, comprised of Harry Lagroix, John Carpenter and
- Harry Hassal, looked after local matters.
- In 1944 as I walked up to the school and caught my first glimpse of my
- new schoolhouse, a welcoming committee was lined up on the steps or
- were they just catching a glimpse of the new school ma’am? Happy indeed
- were my two years there. We won and kept for two years the coveted
- Strathcona Trust Shield for Physical Education. A boy in grade nine
- wanted to look his best for the Christmas Concert (he was a bit of a
- showoff) so he came to school with his hair done up in “rags.” Vanity
- changed to remorse when he was teased by the other boys.
- Dr. Herbert Coutts was Superintendent of Schools and chose a very cold
- day to make his inspection. He stayed at noon and enjoyed the hot soup and
- tasty goodies the children gave him. When he was ready to leave, he asked
- if the older boys could help him dig his car out of a snowdrift. We got a
- good report that year.
- With the exception of two families, the children came to school on
- horseback or by team and buggy-cutter. Northern Crown had been closed
- so two girls from that district rode five and one half or six miles to
- Prosperity and held the record of arriving at school the earliest, winter
- and summer. We had a bit of a family feud when a horse broke loose and
- helped itself to the closest oat bundle or bag of feed.
- The scare of my teaching days came on Arbour Day. The children came
- armed with rakes to clean up the grounds. Near completion, we had a big
- pile of refuse. “Look! Smoke!” someone cried. Busy little fingers had set
- fire to a pile of grass behind the barn. A bucket brigade was formed and
- the fire was soon put out.
- Edinglassie was the nearest operating school and in the spring we
- challenged each other to a ball game. Mrs. Irene Cargill was the teacher
- and her husband Johnny was on hand to umpire a fair game.
- In 1949 the school was closed as each year it had become more difficult
- to get a teacher. The solution was to bus the children to Chauvin. The
- school building was purchased by Harry Hassall and is now a shop. Tall
- trees stand as sentinels in an unkept overgrown area on a side road that is
- seldom travelled. There is no evidence of school days, dear old golden rule
Prosperity School District No. 2126
Submitted by Eleanor Perry
125-126-127