Math teacher Sherry Read's classroom is a total mess. The students are gone for the summer, and light fixtures dangle from the ceiling. The floor has a layer of dust. Down the hallway, workers make a racket while they renovate the school, which dates back to the 1890s. They're working in what has become an archaeological site.
A construction crew at the Oklahoma City school made a startling discovery earlier this month. They found old chalkboards with class lessons that were written almost a century ago, and chalk drawings still in remarkably good condition. So Read doesn't mind the mess. In fact, she's amazed.
"It's like touching history, like being a part of what was going on during the day," she says. "It's just remarkable and mysterious, trying to figure out what some of this was."
The biggest mystery is an old multiplication wheel. It's a circle with factors on the inside and other numbers on the outside. No one can figure it out.
But there's no mystery about when the lessons were written.
It was 1917, right after Thanksgiving. There's a turkey and pilgrim theme in every room. One picture shows a little girl feeding a turkey. She's in a pink and white knee-length dress and stockings; bright yellow curls frame her face. The picture is intricate, so detailed it must have been drawn by a teacher's hand.
There's also music and civics lessons, and rules for keeping clean. A vocabulary list highlights words like "blunder" and "choke" written in smooth cursive. Even the word "whoa" is listed because many people got around on horse and buggy back then.
Also on the board, a list of student names frozen in time.
"We're not sure if that meant they were good students for the day, or they accomplished that," Read says. "Or were their names up there because they were bad for the day?"
These snapshots are fragile. A simple, misplaced elbow can wipe them away. So school officials are now trying to figure out the best way to preserve these illuminating bits of the past. Jeff Briley of the Oklahoma Historical Society says it's important to secure the rooms by protecting chalkboards with acrylic glass, and then controlling the temperature and light.
"They're meant to be fleeting," he says. "Chalk on a blackboard is not meant as a permanent media at all."
He said everyone wants to preserve the blackboards, but they're too fragile to move. So the old lessons may become part of the modern classrooms.
"If you make it secure, you make it to where there's no physical problems, you give it a stable environment, well then you'll be good perhaps for another 100 years," Briley says.
Sherry Read says she gets a nice vibe from the chalkboards. She thinks the teachers of 1917 left the lessons for a reason.
"You would have cleaned off your board so you could be ready the next day to come back and teach," she says. "So I think they left them on there on purpose to send a message to us, to say, 'This is what was going on in our time.'"
Blackboard drawings are the fruit flies of art. They have short lifespans. That's why the folks at Emerson High are scrambling. They want to preserve these snapshots from a century ago for future generations of Oklahoma students.
Recognize the wheel and know how it works? If so, comment or tweet @morningedition.
Transcript
RENEE MONTAGNE, HOST:
A construction crew at an Oklahoma City school made a startling discovery earlier this month. Behind the walls of Emerson High School, they found old chalkboards and, on them, scrawled class lessons from almost a century ago - chalk drawings in remarkable condition. Jacob McCleland from member station KGOU reports that school officials are trying to figure out the best way to preserve those sketches of the past.
JACOB MCCLELAND, BYLINE: Math teacher Sherry Read's classroom is a total mess. The students are gone for the summer, and light fixtures now dangle from the ceiling. The floor has a layer of dust. Down the hallway, workers make a racket while they renovate the school, which dates back to the 1890s. They're working in what's become an archaeological site, but Read doesn't mind. She's amazed that, hiding behind the walls at Emerson High School, workers found lessons from 1917, written on vintage blackboards.
SHERRY READ: It's like touching history, like being a part of what was going on during the day, and just remarkable and mysterious, trying to figure out what some of this was.
MCCLELAND: The biggest mystery is an old multiplication wheel. It's a circle with factors on the inside and other numbers on the outside. The thing is no one can figure it out. But there's no mystery about when the lessons were written. It was 1917, right after Thanksgiving. There's a turkey and pilgrim theme in every room. One picture shows a little girl feeding a turkey. She's in a pink and white knee-length dress and stockings. Bright yellow curls frame her face. The picture is intricate, so detailed it must've been drawn by a teacher's hand. There's music and civics lessons. There are rules for keeping clean and a vocabulary list - words like blunder and choke written in smooth cursive - and whoa. Yes, that was an important word back then. Many people got around on horse and buggy. Also on the board, a list of student names, frozen in time.
READ: So we're not sure if that meant they were good students for the day or they accomplished that, or was that something - were their names up there because they were bad for the day (laughter)?
MCCLELAND: These snapshots are fragile. A simple misplaced elbow can wipe them away. So Jeff Briley of the Oklahoma Historical Society says it's important to secure the rooms, protect chalkboards with acrylic glass and then control the temperature and light.
JEFF BRILEY: They're meant to be fleeting. It's - chalk on a blackboard is not meant as a permanent media at all.
MCCLELAND: He says everyone wants to preserve the blackboards, but they're too fragile to move. So the old lessons may become part of the modern classrooms.
BRILEY: If you make it secure, you make it where there's no physical problems. You give it a stable environment. Well, then you'll be good, perhaps, for another hundred years.
MCCLELAND: Teacher Sherry Read gets a nice vibe from the chalkboards. She thinks the teachers of 1917 left the lessons for a reason.
READ: You know, you'd have cleaned off your boards so you could be ready the next day to come back and teach. So I think they left them on there on purpose to send a message to us, to say that this is what was going on during our time.
MCCLELAND: Blackboard drawings are the fruit flies of art. They have short life spans. That's why the folks at Emerson High are scrambling. They want to preserve these snapshots from a century ago for future generations of Oklahoma students. For NPR News, I'm Jacob McCleland. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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