I attended the Brothers School in my 7th and 8th grade years. My brother was two years younger and my sister was four years younger. We attended a one room school with 1st through 8th Grades. There were 13 students and one teacher. The school had electricity, but most of us lived on ranches in the surrounding area, and the ranches did not have electricity. We did our home work with lanterns. We had a hot lunch program. The parents would purchase cases of soup and the older students would prepare the soup and serve it. I don’t remember who did the dishes, but they got done. The first year we had an outhouse, the second year we had plumbing and flush toilets. I sort of recall pushing the outhouse back a foot or so on a dark Halloween night.
One thing that was amusing was the drive to the school each day. Some parents would rive in excess of a 50 mile trip to Brother. We had a shorter commute. On good days were drove ourselves to school in a pickup. Across our ranch and through the neighbors ranch to school. Lot of folks thought we had a special driver’s license. Nope, it was all private lands. After all if we could drive tractors, trucks and pickups, what was the big deal.
Between my first and second year at the school a big hole was dug for a septic tank. There must have been a community gathering because several of us Desert Rats were there. Us kids referred to ourselves as Desert Rats. I can still recall Spud yelling let’s go. He turn and ran right into the hole. In his defense it was dark. He broke his arm.
For school recess we had about an acre to play in, with a barb wire fence surrounding the yard. There was a swing set and of course we tried to go over the top. One of the bunch made the ride. He got straight up and it was amazing. Except then he came straight down and crashed in a heap. We all laughed and he dusted himself off and we determined we would not do that again.
There was an old building on the school grounds. It was full of broken stuff and it was determined to be no fun to play in. We had a game called Annie Over. We split the students into two groups. One group on each side of the building. The side with the soccer ball would yell Annie Over and toss the ball over the building. The receiving group would grab the ball and charge around the building. The goal was to hit someone with the thrown ball. The escaping crew was trying to run abound the building to the opposite side. If you made the side you were safe. I don’t recall what happened to the kids that were hit.
Then there was a sort of baseball. A soft ball was utilized and there was a pitcher. It must have been a work up sort of game. Two things happened that were rather significant. There was a community gathering and a bunch of adults started using out baseball area. One Rancher slide into the base and broke his leg. Seems as though us Rats were again in trouble. We could not see the harm in utilizing large rocks for bases. Of course we were kids with one softball. We lost it, but the game had to go on. We found a golf ball. However there were a couple problems and that game was short lived. We could not figure out how to pitch the a ball without endangering the pitcher with a flying golf ball. Problem solved. The batter got to hit the ball. The game last about one crack of the bat. Do you have any idea how far those golf balls will fly when hit with a bat. We never found the ball. The outfield players were not out far enough.
The military flew jets over the school area. We would hear the jets coming and we would run to the school windows. The pilots were low enough that we would wave at each other. Our teacher was not aware of the our friendly pilots. The screaming jets arrived. We ran and waved. The teacher had her back to the windows. When the jet scream got loud she looked, threw her book and screamed. We laughed at her and she got really angry. She wrote a letter to the military demanding the jets stop flying past the school. She said it was a safety issue. The jets stopped and when us Rats heard why we were miffed. So in true Rat fashion we devised our Revenge. She did not eat lunch with us. She walked a short distance to her Mobil home. She left her keys in her desk. Have you ever seen a teacher yelling and pounding on a school to get back inside. Of course us Rats were blind and could not see or hear her. Yes we got in trouble for locking her out of the school, but it was worth it. Poor teacher actually sat on a tack and a whoopie cushion before that year was up.
We had a music teacher that traveled to our school once a week. We had the plastic flutes. One day she said it would be fun to have a ukulele band. The next week she arrived at the school to find 13 students all with ukuleles. We did learn to play the things, but she learned with us. She had no idea how to play the thing either. She was a sweet lady and she was not outside the Rat’s humor. Seems a though a device got put in her car’s tail pipe. She thought her car was falling apart. Somehow she found it and yes we got a lecture.
Community gathering were held at the school and 50 -100 ranch folks would appear. Of all ages. Christmas parties, dances and barbeques were held. The smoke in the school was so think it was an actual haze. After all smoking was permitted in public places. I don’t recall any side effects.
However, those community gathering were a hazard. The Health Folks decided that we were going to die of Rocky Mountain Tick Fever. Since we were were a rather captive audience it was decided to vaccinate the entire community. The Health folks arrived at the school on a designated day and all ages got vaccinated. Those danged things hurt. I saw big mean ranchers cry. Well the shots started with a series and then each year for several years there was a follow up shot. The shots stopped as suddenly as they began. Seems as though there was not any Rocky Mountain ticks on the high desert that were infected. We didn’t ever get an apology.
The Brother’s School District was an independent district. Upon graduating, or maybe living in the district, tuition to a high school was provided, anywhere in the State of Oregon. The district also paid two dollars a day to the parents. I chose to go to Redmond High school while my brother and sister attended Bend High School. Was sort of interesting to go from a one room school with 13 students to a school of 700 with all sorts of rooms and teachers. I don’t recall getting lost too many time the first day.