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Metchosin's first teacher
Elizabeth Fisher lived with her two daughgters Emily, aged eight, and
Edith, aged six, in the living quarters that had been provided at the
rear of the building. Her two little boys stayed with their father and
Mrs. Morris (grandmother) at Glen Lake.
Every
Saturday morning William Fisher saddled his horse and rode over the
hills to take fresh provisions to his wife and daughters, returning late
Sunday. The living quarters as seen in this 1899 photograph of the
school was really no more than an attached shed. The school was heated by an
open brick fireplace. The men of
the district, when clearing land, were always alert to find a supply of
suitable bark which they would haul to the school. About the turn of the century the fireplace was replaced by a
wood-burning stove, for a more equal distribution of heat.
Water was provide by a well close by.
 Some
of the other early teachers boarded with families in the district. Miss
Sarah Robinson taught at Metchosin
School in 1899 and lived with the Duke family. She accompanied the Duke children,
Alfred and Annie to and from school, a three mile walk twice a day.
Sometimes Thomas Duke would take them by boat across the channel at
Witty's Lagoon, and so the walk was shortened.
Source: The First Hundred Years Metchosin
Elementary School 1872-1972, Marion I. Helegesen
Source: FootPrints Pioneer Families of the
Metchosin District, Marion I. Helgesen editor
[ Teacher' Duty ]
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