ELK RAPIDS — Small town school, big dreams.
Donna Sayler and Jackie Smith envision transforming the former Yuba School into a museum and cultural community center.
Built in 1860, the school served the community until it closed in 1964. The two-room school shuttered when consolidation swept rural communities and small schools nationwide were swallowed up by adjacent larger districts. Yuba School became a part of the Elk Rapids School District, which owns the building today.
Sayler will give a talk Thursday at the Elk Rapids Historical Society Museum detailing the history of the Yuba School, which during its lifetime mirrored Yuba's fluctuating population.
By the turn of the 20th century, Yuba featured a sawmill, cheese factory, two churches, Pony Express stop, woolen mill and post office. The number of students drawn from surrounding farmsteads prompted a school expansion to two rooms, an unusual size for a village school.
"The white settlers, beyond survival, their two main priorities were educating their children and a church where they could worship," said Sayler, president of the Yuba Historical Society. "Now Yuba is a very small community."
The Yuba school building, situated at the corner of U.S.-131 and Yuba Road, is sturdy and well-preserved, with hardwood floors, original windows, downstairs lunchroom and chalkboards still intact. The school is also unusual in that each room has a full basement underneath.
"In 1901, an addition was built so that makes it a significant school, as most of them were one-room schools," said Sayler, whose husband, Richard, attended kindergarten there during the school's final year. "It was built to survive; it's as solid as can be."
Smith attended the Yuba School during the 1940s — a younger student, she was in the "little room" — and remembers one teacher managing multiple grades at a time.
"We'd study or do penmanship while she was teaching other grades," said Smith.
The basics of reading, writing and arithmetic formed the foundation of each day. During recess, girls would play jacks or jump rope while boys would play baseball.
"Our biggest thing was baseball, we had the Yuba School Indian baseball team," Smith said.
The Elk Rapids Historical Society is hosting Sayler's talk, giving the newer Yuba organization a chance to share information about their goals and accomplishments.
"They're the newest one and we always try to give a nonprofit historical organization a chance to tell us what's going on in their group," said Dan LeBlond, president of the Elk Rapids Area Historical Society.
The effort to preserve the Yuba School began shortly after it closed when the Yuba Women's Club received a lease to use the building. The group is still going strong to help preserve and renovate the school, aided now by the Yuba Historical Society. The society formed in response to a series of successful school reunions organized by Smith.
"When I retired, I wondered over the years what had happened to the kids I went to school with, so I wrote a list and began looking up phone numbers and addresses," said Smith, whose efforts in 2006 launched an annual tradition that draws former students to the school from around the country.
In addition to making the Yuba School a museum with exhibits, the Yuba Historical Society envisions offering programs there about school life 100 years ago.
"We have a curriculum started and retired teachers who want to help us," said Sayler. "We have a strong sense of urgency to get this building renovated so that people can enjoy it."
Archive: Monday
From school to museum, cultural center
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BATA plan: Load more bikes on buses
Cyclists who pedal the Leelanau Trail between Traverse City and Suttons Bay now have more back-and-forth options.
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Goodwill to develop food truck
An area nonprofit will rely on more than $20,000 in taxpayer-funded grants to begin operating a food truck that accepts Bridge Cards.
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Downtown leader passes away
TRAVERSE CITY — A community pillar who literally helped shape downtown Traverse City died unexpectedly Sunday night of an apparent heart attack. For more than three decades, Bryan Crough, 59, left his mark on local politics and culture, serving as a
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Light & Power board balks at price of proposal
Traverse City Light & Power board members balked at a $60,000-plus, no-bid proposal to plot the city-owned utility’s future.
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Historical Photo of the Week: 06/17/2013
Can any readers identify the people in this photo? (Click the photo at right to view it larger.)
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Gottwald wins Roubaix
Forty is the new 30. Or 20. And also the decade of choice for Cherry-Roubaix road race champions this year.
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Cheers: 06/17/2013
To U.S. Coast Guard Cmdr. Joseph Buzzella Jr., who stepped down as commander of the Coast Guard’s Traverse City Air Station after a two-year posting.
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Empire event to celebrate beloved soundman
The northern Michigan musical community will pay homage to one of its own during the Summer Solstice Celebration of Music and Community on June 23 from noon to 9 p.m. at Johnson Park in Empire.
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Cherry-Roubaix category winners
Winners from this weekend's Cherry-Roubaix:
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News from 100 years ago: 06/17/2013
H.S. HULL has added the launch “Hilda” to the fleet of boats on Lake Leelanau. It is said that there are to be some fast motor boat races pulled off on that lake this summer.
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Letters to the Editor: 06/17/2013
Change our habits; Multiplying enemies.
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'Thunder' to roll to honor vets
Members of Rolling Thunder Michigan Chapter 1 invite the public to polish their chrome and join them as they hit the highway for their fourth annual Pure Thunder-escorted veterans memorial ride.
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Community Newsmakers: 06/17/2013
Eight local residents have been nominated for the 2013 National Cherry Festival Distinguished Senior Award.
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Northern Notes: Just Mulch gets thank-you
Debra Norman, principal at Lake Ann Elementary School, wrote to thank Scott and Deb Talquist from Just Mulch for providing the school with the equipment and manpower to keep its pond and waterfall operating.
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Bums' Birch slams Slammers
Chase Burch sent a message to the rest of the Frontier League. That message: Don't throw at Chase Burch. Joliet already got it.
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Wolves fall to Detroit
The Traverse City Wolves fell to 2-1 with a 33-13 home setback against the Detroit Ravens.
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Community in Brief: 06/17/2013
Ac Paw garage sale donations; Food Bank open house; Grass River events; and more.
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Lalonde, Rokos winners at Cherry Raceway
A full show was what awaited fans as they packed the facilities of the fast 3/8ths (0.375) of a mile high banked dirt oval Friday at Cherry Raceway in Fife Lake.
Continued ... - Monday, June 10, 2013
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Gun range change not yet sighted
Don't expect state officials to make a decision on the future of controversial gun ranges along Hoosier Valley Road anytime soon.
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Central United Methodist Church celebrates 100th birthday
One hundred years and Central United Methodist Church arguably remains the handsomest building on the block. The 1,100-member church will celebrate the 100-year dedication of its place of worship with a neighborhood block party on June 21 from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.
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A breath of relief for severe asthmatic patients
Janet Berryhill thought she made a big mistake after getting the newest treatment aimed at patients with severe and uncontrollable asthma.
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Cheers: 06/10/2013
To Berdyll Hanrath, who signed up for World War II while still in the eighth grade; he never went back to school but got his high school diploma anyway.
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Beach Bums snap 3-game losing streak
Need to stop a losing streak? Scott Dunn's the guy. The right-hander allowed just one run on eight hits in 6.2 innings of work Sunday evening as the Traverse City Beach Bums snapped a three-game losing streak with a much-needed 3-1 win over the Frontier Greys at Wuerfel Park.
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Locals work to improve far away lives
Chris Treter’s search for the world’s best coffee beans has taken the owner of Higher Grounds Trading Company all over the globe, but you won’t find the places he visits in any travel brochure.
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Sports in Brief: 06/10/2013
TC Wolves rout Grizzlies, 37-3; Carruth wins Mannino Scholarship; Blue Stars sweep, improve to 15-0. (Plus more)
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BATA plan: Load more bikes on buses



