Remembering the one-room schoolhouses

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Thomas School, 1948
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PRINCETON — Frances Timmerman Hamlink was only 19 when she stepped before her first classroom full of students.

"The first job I had was at what they called Trading House School," Hamlink said. "It was in western Bureau County, about as far west as you can go."

Hamlink is one of the few teachers — almost all women — who taught in Bureau County's one room schoolhouses many decades ago.

Hamlink found herself in a one room schoolhouse on the way to becoming a physical education teacher.

Hamlink was born and raised in Mineral. She attended Mineral High School for two years, and then moved to Amboy during World War II. She graduated from Amboy High School in 1945.

Hamlink had two inspirations in deciding to become a teacher.

One was her mother, who adopted her as a baby.

"My mother was a teacher her whole life," she said. "That's all I ever remember her doing, was teaching school."

The other inspiration was Hamlink's love of sports.

"I got interested in sports, and that's what I wanted to major in — to be a gym teacher, so that's what I did," she said.

Hamlink planned on minoring in elementary education, but ended up before a whole school full of students before she taught physical education.

"I got into teaching elementary before I became a gym teacher," she said. "It worked out."

Hamlink had begun working on her degree at Illinois Normal University when she found herself at Trading House School. After one year, the state closed the school because there were fewer than 15 students, so Hamlink moved to the Thomas School in Fairfield Township.

Every summer Hamlink returned to college to work on her degree, but for 10 years, every fall found her teaching first- through eighth-graders at the Thomas School.

Hamlink said she averaged about 20 students every years.

"That was too many," she said. "That was not pleasant because I felt I was not doing what I should for the kids because I had too many. I didn't have time for them, and that worried me."

But Hamlink, like other one room schoolhouse teachers, did her best. She said certain grades, such as first and second, could be put together for reading.

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