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This is copied here with permission from The Weatherford Democrat, July 23, 1956 issue.

Education Second Only to Religion in County History

Education was second only to religion in the life of our pioneers. Not many schools were attempted for several years because of the scattered families. Those which existed were three or four months subscription schools with pupils paying about $3.00 a month. There are records of schools in Weatherford in 1858, 1860, and 1861, with such teachers as Professor Keeler, a Miss Bounds and Miss Mary Ann Dyer (who became the wife of Colonel Charles Goodnight). Exercises to demonstrate the knowledge of these subscription school pupils took all day and part of the night.

It was not until after the Constitution of 1876 provided for tax supported free schools that Weatherford established in 1881, the seventh free high school in Texas. By 1885, there were a number of school districts in the county and three thousand five hundred eighty white pupils and sixty-six colored receiving free tuition. Also in that year, Weatherford had its first graduates from public free schools...five of them!

The earliest schools were log cabins with no heat, no desks, no blackboards, and no pens nor paper. The seats were split log benches with no backs. The floors were often of dirt, and the only writing materials were slate pencils, which were broken up and doled out, a piece at a time. The teacher usually had the only books so the learning and recitation caused what is sometimes known as a "blab" school, where the pupils studied aloud.

The desire for higher learning on the part of parker citizens is shown by its many academies and schools of college rank. The first of these was at Veal's Station. William G Veal, associates, and successors, first ran the school, then the Methodist Church; later, by B.W. Akard; afterward, it was a Presbyterian school known as Parsons College.

The Phoenix Lodge No. 275 commenced a brick two-story building for which the cornerstone was laid on July 5, 1869 in Weatherford. This was to be used as a Masonic Hall and a school that was to be public but not free.

Because of some difficulties the Masonic Institute building was not immediately completed and the Weatherford High School Association was organized early in 1875 to accomplish this end. Its students necessarily paid tuition, and for that reason, after free schools were made possible, the high school was separated from the Institute in 1881. Three years later the latter school became known as Cleveland College for the U.S. President.

When Professor D.S. Switzer came to assume charge in 1889, it was called Weatherford College, and entered an era of greater popularity and prosperity. For a time early in the twentieth century it operated as an academy, but in June, 1921, it was restored to college rank and assumed the status of a denominational junior college, and is now our own County-supported Weatherford College.

There were a number of other schools through this period of time. Two of outstanding merit were located in Springtown and were known as the Springtown Male and Female Institute and the College Hill Institute. Two early schools were established in Whitt; one of these was called the Parker County Institute and the other Whitt Seminary. Another school of advanced learning was founded in the community of Peaster and was known as the Peaster Institute.

The second such institution in Weatherford was begun in 1889 and was attended by many of our young ladies and those from afar. It was the Texas Female Seminary and afterwards called Fairmont. It was located south of Weatherford on what became known as Seminary Hill.

Another wonderful institution which still exists in Parker County is the Texas Pythian Home. The first idea for the Home was put forward on April 20, 1886, and the following year $2,000 was set aside for an Independent School and Home for Children and Widows. The fund grew until in 1905, at the Convention of that year, Weatherford was chosen as the site. The city had offered $12,500 and 200 acres of land... of this, 100 acres had been donated by the Past Chancellor O.H. Gorman, of the local Lodge.

The cornerstone of the main building was laid on April 22, 1907, and people converged on the spot from all directions. Special trains arrived, a special holiday was proclaimed by Mayor Henry Miller, and the town citizens assisted in the big barbecue given the visitors from all over the state and the nation.

The official opening date was March 1, 1909, and the Winkler children of Amarillo were the first to be welcomed into the Home. Other families of children followed...one including the mother. A building for the boys was added in 1914, and the girls' building in 1925, and a completely furnished eight-bed hospital in 1930. The acreage was increased only two years ago. From the modest beginning of $2,000, the property has grown to valued at nearly one million dollars.

The Home as had some excellent superintendents, like the present one, and these have helped to give an approximately a thousand children the best kind of life and training...their material needs, moral and mental discipline, and religious feeling. Above all, the children have been given the love and understanding which is usually found only in the individual home.


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