Great Great Aunt Mary |
If you’re lucky enough to have a family association or members of your family who have kept archives and records, you will be able to dig up stories about many generations past. The following is based on information I found in a book written about my Parsons Family, on a narrative written by my Great Aunt Martha about her childhood, a journal kept by my Great Aunt Marion, and on the many stories about the “Olden Days” told to me as a child by my Grandmother and her two sisters, Marion and Martha. Perhaps this will inspire my readers to write their own, either for publication or for your great, great, great grandchildren. They will be grateful if you do.
Dateline:
Worthington, Massachusetts, January 25, 1865, my Great, Great, Great
Grandfather, Maurice Parsons, wrote: “My
first nine children have all except one been teachers of primary schools, and I
believe very successful in their occupation.” His Great Granddaughter and
my Great Aunt, Marion Parsons, upheld the Parsons tradition in the years to
come, turning a hen house in her father’s cherry orchard into one of the
highest-ranking schools in New York State. (I would write a book about this 150
years after Maurice wrote those words and call it The Brass Bell.)
At the time Maurice Parsons wrote the letter, his eldest
son, Edwin (my great, great grandfather) had left Worthington for Syracuse, New
York, where he taught school for a while before taking up farming full-time. Having
saved his money, he was able to purchase property and marry his love, Julia
Armstrong, in September, 1846. They had six children, and as these children
came of age, the farm grew in size. Their sons had inherited their father’s
love for making a living off the land. Their eldest daughter, Mary Amelia,
married James Schuyler Jerome, a cousin of Jenny Jerome who had left the
country for England where she married Lord Churchill. They had a son named
Winston.
In the spring of 1890, my Great Grandfather, Willis Parsons,
the youngest of Edwin and Julia’s sons purchased a sixty-some acre farm just up
the road from the family farm. The road back then was a dirt turnpike
connecting Eastern and Western New York State. Over time, Willis added another
138 acres to his holdings and became one of the most respected fruit growers in
the state. All along the Turnpike there were the farms of cousins, aunts and
uncles, sisters and brothers, creating a widespread community of Parsons and
Jerome relations. Though Willis dedicated his life to farming, serving as
long-time President of the New York State Fruit Growers Association, the family
regard for the importance of education was intact.
Children and grandchildren—including Willis’s three
daughters, Grace, Marion, and Martha—attended school every day, in blizzard or
sticky heat, at a small one-room schoolhouse donated by cousin Guy Parsons.
Though the school eventually became part of the local public school system, the
day came when the old school could no longer hold the children or keep them
warm during the frigid winters. Several of the Parsons and Jerome families
opened their parlors for classes. When the Parsons girls finished school, Willis
Parsons insisted his daughters attend college, become teachers.
By and by, the people of the farm community that came to be
known as Westvale were wise enough to look into the future and see where the
industrial revolution was heading. They knew that in order for their children
to be successful in the changing world that lie ahead—the two-lane dirt
turnpike had been paved and horse drawn buggies were replaced with fancy
buggies that motored themselves—only the best of educations would serve their
off-spring and save their community.
Marion Parsons returned to Westvale after college and after
teaching for a year in a rugged frontier town in Washington State, and people
in the community came to her and asked if she would consider starting a new
school to serve their growing numbers.
Though she had loved her travels out west—the trip back home
on the train through California, her voyage to Catalina Island on a
glass-bottom boat—Marion recognized and honored her duty. That summer she approached women who were picking
fruit in her father’s orchards and asked if they would help her clean up an old
chicken coop near the cherry orchard
A local judge and an attorney joined Willis and other
members of the extended family to form a school board. They helped raise money,
donated property, and lay the legal and financial groundwork for what would
become the Cherry
Road School.
On its first day of school, Marion
was presented with the brass bell from the old schoolhouse. Tears sprung to her
eyes as she held the bell whose resounding clang had once signaled her and her sisters,
cousins and friends to the long wooden benches in a tiny one-room school. As
she raised the bell for the first time, she could not have imagined that nearly
100 years later, Cherry Road School would be the alma mater of thousands who
would remember her fondly as Miss Parsons, their first and greatest hero.
If you would like to purchase a copy of The Brass Bell, it’s
available through Sahalie Publishing:
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