Yesterday, as I was driving to work, I saw a truck pulling a very old school bus. As it was rounding the curve by Rand Park, I could see it had Junction written on its side which immediately piqued my interest. When it turned onto Grand Avenue, I was able to spy the rest of the school’s name: Oxford Junction School District. What? I couldn’t believe it. Oxford Junction was my first full-time teaching position. I literally wanted to force the truck to stop, and I imagined pulling in front of it and jumping out of my vehicle to stop them so I could ask about the bus and take a photo, but I sadly didn’t do it because I had things to accomplish in a short period of time. But, wow, do I remember those first teaching days well. My heart smiles cherishing memories from over forty years ago.

One of the most beautiful aspects of teaching at Oxford Junction was its small size and my large classroom. When I taught ninth grade English, I had the entire class of ninth graders. It was easy to establish relationships and routines. I remember writing with my students and sharing in a circle. One year my students researched local citizens and created a booklet. I’ll never forget the oldest citizen’s interview I attended to support my student. He said he didn’t understand why he was still alive after losing so many loved ones, a truly heart-wrenching moment.

Another delight was that my classroom had a couch in it and a fire escape shoot. Boy, sliding down the fire shoot was a real hoot! I got to have a couch because I directed the spring plays, and we used it often as a stage prop. I remember so many of my students from back then and the plays I directed. They were almost always farces, and I’m sure many were not that stellar, but I thought each one was incredibly fun.

Rural communities have had to consolidate due to money constraints, their small sizes, etc. There hasn’t been a high school in Oxford Junction for decades, but I’ll always cherish those early teaching days.



Spirits Rising

once we were happy
smiling in our Easter Sunday dresses
shipped all the way from California,
a gift from Great Aunt Grace,
our sweet joy like
sliding through a fire escape shoot
into a glorious green day
free from worry
like a spirit rising
on a glorious Easter morning

Barb Edler
31 March 2024

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10 responses to “Remembering Great Times”

  1. Glenda Funk Avatar

    Barb,

    I enjoyed this drive down memory lane and your early teaching days. I can imagine the kids sliding down that fire escape. I know the experience of teaching in a small rural school that’s no longer there. Knowing a place you were part of is bittersweet. I wonder if any of my students from back then are still in that little town. And that photo! WOW! What a flashback. I have Easter photos around here. I’m gonna hunt for them. Might need to write a poem. Happy Easter. TTYL.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. kimhaynesjohnson Avatar

    Barb, these are the posts I love so much – those that take a walk back in time and show the then and the now. How it all started with a school bus, a faded paint bus of long ago, still running strong through the place it calls home. From that bus’s perspective, I wonder if it could tell the tales of change, of time, of people. The photo is simply adorable – – I love those smiles and the slightly short pants (probably because of those hands in the pockets) on the boy with the bowtie, the buzz cut, and the eyes closed. Was he the character of the bunch? It’s just a hunch. Photos that preserve a single moment in time are some of the most fascinating things to me. I love the way you framed the past weaving through the present.

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    1. Barb Edler Avatar

      My youngest brother was very shy. His twin sister was not. He is a complete character today.

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  3. wordancerblog Avatar

    Barb – this post is so wonderful – from the remembrance of your first teaching experience to that photo and poem of an Easter long ago. Great Aunt Grace had very good taste. I love the collars on those jackets. What a sweet moment to remember! Thank you for writing and for reading my poems!

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  4. Elisabeth Ellington Avatar

    Both of the high schools I’ve taught at have had classes small enough (100 or fewer) that I’ve been able to teach the entire grade level. I really love being able to know all of the students in a graduating class. I think that’s very special. I so enjoyed reading this window into your early teaching days. A classroom with a couch and a fire escape shoot would provide all kinds of humor and stories!

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  5. Denise Krebs Avatar
    Denise Krebs

    Barb, what fun! I loved reading about Oxford Junction School. It reminded me of Maurice, Iowa, before they merged with Orange City. Although, I came after the merger, so I only heard the stories. Later I taught at a very small Catholic school in Granville with graduating classes of 25ish. It lasted until 2013, when the classes were even small and they had to merge with another school a couple of towns over. Those are bittersweet times, and the memories last a lifetime. I so loved the Easter picture. First I thought you were in the front row, middle, but now I’m not sure. I love the poem that draws your whole post together. I really like “a glorious green day / free from worry”

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    1. Barb Edler Avatar

      No I’m the goofy looking one on the left. My older brother and sister are in the back row. One time we had a graduation class of 13.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Denise Krebs Avatar
        Denise Krebs

        You are darling. I just thought I saw something familiar in the little sister. So the one in the middle and your little brother are twins?

        Liked by 1 person

  6. Maureen Young Ingram Avatar

    These are fun memories – all instigated by seeing that bus! Isn’t the mind a marvel, to take us meandering in this way? I enjoyed going down memory lane with you. Think of how much your ninth grade students learned by being exposed to these older citizens – that memory, “he didn’t understand why he was still alive after losing so many loved ones” had to have had a profound effect on your students. Great slice, Barb! It has been a real joy to read your posts this month, and I so appreciate all your thoughtful comments on mine. Here’s to poetry together in April! Tomorrow! woohoo!!

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