The Joliet School was located in the township of Stanley on
the West side of the Red Cedar River. The structure was built in
1905. The Late Gus Benson sold 1 acre of his farm for the school
site. In the early days there was no bridge to cross the river.
Eventually a "hanging bridge" was constructed consisting of one
or two planks wide with a rock pier in the middle of the river
for support. The bridge was suspended 4 feet above the water, so
the children from the East side of the river could cross over to
the school.
The school was closed in 1962, and the building was given to
the Barron County Historical Society. It was moved to the Barron
County Game Farm (now the museum complex) in 1964 and has the
distinction of being the first building to appear on the museum
street site. Rural schools were built a few miles apart. The
children walked to school and carried their noon lunch with
them. Grades 1 through 8 attended each school, and normally 1
teacher instructed all 8 grades.
Always room for one more
The school included an enclosed stove oven so the children
would not burn themselves. The school also had a small coat room
for the children's clothing and food. Usually the room was split
into a half for boys and a half for girls. Children attended the
school from 1906-1962. Many of the pictures on the walls of the
museum were of the presidents, especially President Washington.
One room school house K-8th
As you can see the students and the teacher had
quite a busy day. The following is a copy of the schedule that
they used.