Remembering Littlefield School

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It’s obvious there were few girls during the years Fran Larson attended the Littlefield School southwest of Manlius. When Larson was in seventh grade, there was only one other girl, and she was in first grade. (Photo contributed)
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MANLIUS — For some people, their days at a one-room rural schoolhouse were the best days of their lives.

But retired schoolteacher Fran Larson can’t look back at her days at the tiny Littlefield School southwest of Manlius without shaking her head.

“I was the only student in my class all eight years, so therefore I had no competition, which I think is a negative,” she said.

And the issue was bigger than no competition. Larson said she has all kinds of admiration for the teachers, but she doesn’t agree with people who think the education was the best.

“I don’t feel that way at all,” she said. “I’m just amazed that we learned as much as we did because the teachers were so stretched, from the first grade to the eighth grade.”

Larson doesn’t fault her teachers, especially Ortha Jorgeson, who taught her eighth-grade class.

“I think the education we had was the best we could have,” she said. “That was the only education we could have, and it was OK; but it doesn’t compare with the education we have today.”

Larson said the students missed out on things such as science and art classes.

Larson said it was nice for the younger children to be able to listen to their older classmates’ lessons.

“But by the time you got to be in seventh or eighth grade, at least in my experience, I spent most of the time teaching the first-graders how to read,” she said. “I think that’s why I decided to become a teacher.”

Larson said when she was a student, Bureau County had tests the students needed to pass.

“We had tests from the county — I think every month — and that always made me a little nervous,” she said. “Then when you got to seventh grade, you had to go into Manlius and take tests before you could go on.”

Despite Larson’s concerns, she passed her tests and moved on to Manlius High School before getting her teaching degree from Western Illinois University.

Outside the classroom, Larson had nothing but fun with her classmates.

“The poor teachers, they had all these classes, and they were busy at recess,” she said. “We just went out, and when I think back on it, played some dangerous games.”

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