Education in Waterford
Written by by John Divine for the Waterford
Foundation
The history of education in Waterford did not begin with the present
school system. When the Commonwealth of Virginia established free
schools in 1820, the children of Waterford had benefited from private
schools for more than half a century.
Waterford was basically a Quaker
community and The Society of Friends
was always conscious of the value of a good education for the children
of its members. In providing for their own they did not exclude those
of other faiths from their schools.
Today there stand in Waterford buildings that have served the
community as places of education, both public and private. Although
documentation in some cases is meager we will attempt to construct
a brief history of each school from known facts and local legend.
The Friends Meeting House School (Loyalty Road)
The brick structure standing
to the east of the Meeting House was built in 1805-06. John Williams
(1771-1840), prominent Quaker and local business man, disbursed
the funds and had general supervision
of the construction. Jacob Divine, a local stone and brick mason,
was the builder. Joseph Hough was a teacher in this school at one
period of time. Hough later left Waterford to settle in Newton, Iowa,
where his descendent, Emerson
Hough, became famous as a Western novelist
and as author of The Covered Wagon, North of 36, and other novels
adapted to early motion pictures.
Hannah Mendenhall Worley School (1562) Second Street)
Hannah Mendenhall Worley operated
a school in the brick dwelling at the southeast corner of Janney
and Second Streets. This school
started in the mid 1830's and continued for nearly a decade. The
twin front doors may have resulted from changing a window to a door
for the school.
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Ratcliffe House
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Ratcliffe School (40138 Main Street)
The Ratcliffe House is on the north side of Main
Street near the Mill. As in Hannah Worley's school, this building
shows two front
doors to accommodate the school. This was operating in the late 1840's
and early 50's. Although little is known of this school, it is mentioned
in the poem "Early Memories of Waterford" written by the
octogenarian Mrs. Mary Dutton (Miss Mollie) Steer in 1928.
"Dear cousin mary kept the school patient and kind was she
and all the little tots in town she taught their a.b.c.'s. A.B.C.'S."
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Waterford Old School
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Old School (High and Fairfax Streets )
Fire
burns half of the school »
In 1871, the General Assembly of Virginia
passed a public school bill. Six years later action was taken to
bring public education
to Waterford. In 1877, Edwin A. Atlee sold one and one-half acres
of land bounded by High Street and Butchers Row to the school trustees
of Jefferson District, for the sum of $350.00, the site to be used
for the construction of a public school.
The cost of this building and the identity of the first teachers
do not appear in the records. The records do reveal, however, that
for the session 1886-87, the faculty was comprised of Alma Karstetter,
Ella Steer and Jeanette Lewis with a high enrollment of 82 and a
low of 66.
For the term 1904-05 we are given some insight to current salaries:
Virginia Taylor, principal, $42.00 per month; Minnie E. Russell and
Mary Shawen, teachers, were each paid $27.00.
The first building was destroyed by fire in February, 1909. The janitor
in cleaning the coal stoves left a bucket of hot ashes sit- ting
on the wooden floor, thus starting a fire that soon consumed the
building. Classes were held in the basement of the Baptist Church
until the new building was completed. This building, erected on the
site of the old one, was ready for occupancy for the 1910-11 term
with R. H. Snodgrass as Principal.
This imposing new structure was built at a cost of $6,000.00 with
funds from the following resources: private donors $1,500.00; insurance
from old building $1,350; and from the Literary Fund $2, (don't check
the mathematics of this breakdown too closely). In 1928, an auditorium
was built adjacent to the school house, and in 1948 a kitchen was
constructed, joining these two buildings
together.
Second Street School (15611 Second Street)
The one-room Second
Street School was
built in 1867 to serve Waterford's black
community, and all of Waterford's black children were educated
here until 1957. It was also used as a church. There is evidence
that a Freedman's Bureau School was operating in 1868 for the Black
people of the community. The top enrollment
was
50, and the average attendance was 30. Government "Red Tape" has
not changed since Miss Sarah A. Steer struggled with the monthly
reports. One question asked was, "Ownership of Building;" the
answer was "Owned by the Freedmen of the Waterford Community." This
is the same building still standing today at the northwest corner
of Janney and Second Streets. In 1866, Reuben Schooley sold to "The
Colored People of Waterford and vicinity" a lot of land for
$75.00. This deed was entered to record. This transferred the same
lot from Reuben E. Schooley and Rachael L., his wife, to Johnathan
Cannady, Mathew Harvey, Alfred Cravens, Henson Young and Daniel Webster
Minor.
Trough Road School
The school was at the corner of Rts. 662
and 704. Quaker Elisha Walker, son of James Walker the owner of Talbot
Farm, operated a
private school in this building in the early 1870's.
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Williams William School
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William Williams School (15612 Second Street
)
The brick building at the northeast corner
of Janney and Second Streets housed a private school for the many
Williams children and a few other friends. Its period of operation
was the decade from 1865-1875.
The building had been built as a warehouse by John Williams who William
Williams School operated a large store in Waterford Family members
believe that it was originally built about 1814, and that extensive
renovation was done to convert it to school purposes. Huntley School:
The frame building in the yard at Huntley Farm housed a small private
school for young ladies around the turn of the century. Robert Walker,
another son of James Walker of "Talbot," established the
school for the education of his daughter and other young ladies of
the community. Possibly the enrollment never exceeded fifteen students.
The Huntley School (15578 High Street)
In 1910 in the yard at Huntley Farm,
a small private Quaker school was housed for young ladies. It was a
small two-room frame schoolhouse and can still be seen as the
brown building clad in "fish-scale" shingles.
Industrial
School/Odd
Fellows Hall/ (15603 Second Street)
The residence to the right of the Second
Street School was built originally as a hall for Waterford's African-American
Lodge No, 2631
of the Grand United Order
of Odd Fellows, a fraternal organization. It was erected in 1893 without interior
partitions on either floor. The entry door opened on the street, rather than
the side as it now does. By 1899 the lodge faced financial difficulties: Quakers
Martha and Ann Sidwell, paid the debt and assumed ownership. In 1904 the
building was serving as an "industrial" school for black
students. Children from the school next door learned vocational
skills such as housekeeping
from 1909-1912. The Sidwell sisters themselves probably
did
the teaching.
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Camelot School
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Camelot School (40145 Main Street)
The School operated in the early 1940's under
the Calvert System by Edward M. Chamberlin, Jr., Headmaster. This
log building on
the south side of Main Street had been used 1802-1827 as part of
Patrick
McGavick's weaving operation.
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Catoctin Creek School
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Catoctin Creek School (15533 Second Street)
In the 1950's and '60s, Mrs. Heath MacCallum
operated a boarding school for boys at her home, Catoctin Creek,
a restored
stuccoed
house on Second Street.
Waterford Elementary School
Built in 1965, originally offered
seven grades; currently K-5-attend.
From the Waterford Foundation Booklet of 1981.
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