Mertilla School - Dist. No. 34 ,78 & 74 - Mertilla Township

Mertilla School - District No. 34, 78 & 74 - Mertilla Township

District # 34 was organized in 1886. It was disorganized in 1946, and consolidated and annexed to #78. In 1958, the patrons of the school voted to consolidate the district with Plains Joint #74 for the fall term. Eventually it became part of District 483 and 226.

At one time the Mertilla school was located in section 6-T31-R29, about a

mile and a half south and east of the town. Sullivan in his Meade County History states that there was a school near the town site but that sometime after 1887, it burned down. The last location of the school was in Section 28-T30-R29. We think this one was built in 1909. On a modern-day map that school would be at the intersection of Roads E & 9... across the road east of present-day Plains View Mennonite Church.

Teachers of Mertilla School

Pane, Dave - 1885 - 1886

Ellis, E. C. - 1886 - 1887

Newby, Mattie - 1891 - 1892

Wells, Walter - 1892 - 1893

White, Bertha - 1892 - 1893

Bonham, Winnie - 1893 - 1894

Aker, Marie - 1913 - 1914

Hudgens, Lee R. - 1914 - 1915

Ebersole, Vernon - 1915 - 1917

Weaver, Raydie M. - 1917 - 1918

Wilson, Ethel - 1918 - 1919

Davis, Fern E. - 1919 - 1920

Padgett, Elizabeth - 1919 - 1920

Hentz, Alma - 1920 - 1921

Hickey, Joseph - 1921 - 1922

Kinnamon, Floy - 1922 - 1923

Small, Ruth B. - 1923 - 1924

McCreight, H.M. - 1924 - 1925

Haigh, Mattie J. - 1925 - 1927

Hickey, Ed - 1927 - 1929

Moler, Gladys - 1928 - 1929

Kuntz, James E. - 1929 - 1930

Wilson, Allen - 1930 - 1932

Tubbs, Helen - 1932 - 1933

Garten, Faye - 1933 - 1934

Lawson, Stella - 1934 - 1935

Unruh, Evelyn - 1935 - 1937

Hooper, Vera - 1937 - 1939

Gullick, Roberta - 1939 - 1940

Fast, Mathilda - 1940 - 1941

Johnson, Lucille - 1941 - 1942

Salmon, Alice - 1942 - 1943

Deaver, Juanita - 1943 - 1944

Surnames of students at Mertilla school:

Anderson, Bland, Blosser, Chappell, Craycraft, Davis, Dierking, Ebersole, Eck, Elliott, Enlow, Fisher, Gardner, Gillick, Ginter, Greer, Griffin, Gum, Hantla, Hatfield, Hentz, Hudgens, Jinkinson, Kile, Montgomery, Moore, Pennington, Pippitt, Rexford, Schmidt, Scott, Sneath, Summer, Svobida, Sweany, Thompson, Updike, Vangilder, Waters, Whan.

"Plains KS, 100 Years"

Mertilia School District No.34 was organized October 11, 1886, and it was located out in the middle of many families in the rural area. The first Mertilla School, no one seems to remember just where it stood, but the second one was built in 1909, and was a landmark for many travelers. The location was 19 miles from Meade, 15 miles from Plains and 15 miles from Montezuma. This was the centrally located meeting place for the whole community. At this time, many students rode a horse to school or walked and until the last few years, the old hitching rail was still standing.

School was important and the earliest teacher anyone was able to recollect was Mattie Hague. One of the teachers curtained off one corner of the schoolhouse and lived right there. Teachers did their own janitor work, building of the fires, hauled the drinking water and planned a lot of the activities for the community. Children and adults alike participated in literary, (which was a program held once a month for entertainment), box suppers, Halloween parties and the Christmas program was a big annual event. These gatherings helped keep neighbors in touch with each other, as telephones were pretty scarce.

The country schools took turns hosting Spring Fun Days. At this event, we had ciphering matches, spelling bees, races, high and broad jumps and always a basket dinner at the noon hour. These usually consisted of three or four schools and children made many friendships at this event.

Mertilla Schoolhouse was used for Sunday School and Church. Mrs. Hessie Fisher and Mae Rexford organized this Country Sunday School, and we had a part-time clergyman, but Sunday School was held there for 60 years. We had many dedicated teachers and some good training helped the

youngsters in growing up and learning the Bible. The yearly affair was the big basket dinner on Easter Sunday and our attendance was the largest on this Sunday. Children enjoyed Easter egg hunts and the adults caught up on their visiting and there was some horseshoe playing in the evening.

When the country schools consolidated and many of the homesteads were bought up by big landowners, the Sunday School was disbanded. Where we had houses almost every mile, now there is one every three or four miles, plus there were larger families in those days. Thus ending an era of religion, good fellowship, neighborliness and marching into the past.

Memories of Jim Gillick from the "1985 Meade County" History book

"In the fall of 1886 the town of Mertilla began. A small one room house, in which Sam High started the first grocery store, was moved in by the power of four oxen. "Soon there were other stores. Some were sod and some frame buildings. Goods and lumber were sent by freight from Dodge City.

"Later, a school house 12 by 24 feet was built. Fully equipped this building cost $76 and stood one mile south of what used to be Bill Ginter's place, but is now the home of Al Dierking.

"There was no floor in the school and only one chair. That was for the teacher, Dave Pane. There were many pupils that year, and sometimes the younger students had to wait.

"Lunches were packed in buckets and sometimes traded for something one liked better. School lasted only eight months at that time..... (Jim then goes on to tell of the hardships of the late 1880's that caused many settlers to move on...)

For a short time after the people left, Jim Gillick was the only remaining one to attend school. "There was one thing I had in advantage and that was a man teacher. We would sit till he saw me getting tired then he would say, 'Well, Jimmy, let's go chase rabbits. Get your dogsl' I'd get my hounds and we'd chase rabbits awhile, then go back to school." ....

There was a class for four boys that winter (1890-91) when Dame Ellis began teaching: Jim Gillick, Ira Scott, Arthur Strohl and Ira Stoltz. "Scott and I put in most every Saturday chasing rabbits and picking cow-chips over in Hayden's pasture." In later years, as a young man, Jim Gillick operated the Mertilla Post Office in his home at the farm. Later, others took the responsibility. Sometimes it would be at the Ellis home, the Stoats, or at the Jim Clemens farm, where Mrs. Gillick took over as substitute until it was moved to another farm.

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