Pity any ancestor who went to Santa Rosa grade schools around the turn of the century. Besides readin' writin' and 'rithmetic, there was also plenty of squintin' and crowdin' and freezin' by the kids. Classrooms were heated by a single potbelly stove; there often weren't enough desks and lighting was poor (no electricity, apparently). One school didn't even have indoor plumbing.

Those were some of the shocking details found in a 1904 expose of conditions in Santa Rosa's three elementary schools. Or perhaps we should say there were six, because each was so overcrowded some students were taught in outbuildings not intended for human occupancy.

The flagship of the town's public school system was the Fourth street school, currently the location known as Fremont Park. (It was renamed Fremont school in early 1906, following a popular trend to rename schools after people rather than a location.)

Built in 1874 and meant to hold 600 students, it was soon packed to the brim; in 1878 - when it was first used as a combined grammar and high school - there were over a thousand. That number dropped by about half after the high school was built on Humboldt street (1895), but the Board of Education was still regularly told the place was overcrowded. Classrooms were intended to hold about forty desks, and a particular class could be smaller or far larger. One year they had to split seventh and eighth grades into morning and afternoon sessions to accommodate all the students.

The 1904 expose found school children still enduring mid-Victorian era conditions. Lighting in the rooms was described as "very dark," "very bad," "little short of criminal," and "vile." Half of the second graders - fifty kids - were being taught in a "temporary one story building with a low thin roof." (The reporter probably meant "tin roof," as the article also says there was no ceiling.)

The rest of this article can be read at the SantaRosaHistory.com website. Because of recurring problems with the Blogger platform, I am no longer wasting my time formatting and posting complete articles here. I will continue to create stubs for the sake of continuity, but will be publishing full articles only at SantaRosaHistory.com.

- Jeff Elliott

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