Wyoming Rural Schools – Authentic Characters

STUDENTS OF THE MIDDLETON SCHOOL DISTRICT IN 1928

27 kids. 14 girls, 13 boys.

Anna Johnson, 14
Oldest child in the family. Helps to look after the younger kids in the family, and at school. Can be a little bossy. Can play piano well enough to accompany the school children when they sing. She plays piano for the church choir. Is very interested in foreign countries and is good at geography.

Hans Johnson, 12
Named after his father, he is considered “the man of the house” when his father is away. He takes this responsibility very seriously, and likes to boss around his sisters. In general he is a serious, hard-working boy who doesn’t talk much at school. He is responsible for taking care of the mule that brings his brothers and sisters to school.

Marie Johnson, 10
Marie has a beautiful singing voice, and likes teaching other kids the hymns that she learns at church. She and her sister Anna often bring in freshly baked goodies to share with the class. She is friendly and well-liked.

Harriet Johnson, 8
Twin sister of Harold Johnson. Because she spends most of her time with her twin and her younger brothers, she is quite a tom boy, and loves to climb trees, climb rocks, go fishing, and ride horse. She likes to be called “Harry.” She gets bored in school and spends a lot of time looking out the window.

Harold Johnson, 8
Twin brother of Harriet Johnson. Because his sister likes to be called Harry, he insists that everyone use his full name, Harold. He also loves the outdoors and likes to help take care of his father’s mules. He sometimes gets in trouble at school when he and Harriet get fidgety and giggly.

George Silas, 11
Very shy and tall for his age. He has had to step up and help take care of his little sister since she was a baby and their mother died, so he is serious and responsible. He and his sister get teased for their shabby clothes and having to share just one lunch bucket (often with not much in it), so he has gotten pretty tough and can beat up any of the boys at school. He is very protective of his little sister Minnie.

Minnie Silas, 8
Minnie is quiet and shy, but has a sweet smile and a kind personality. Sometimes she stutters a little when she is nervous. She feels better when she is holding her little rag doll, and brings it with her to school most days.  She is teased about that, but her brother stands up for her.

Nettie Anderson, 13
Nettie is a spoiled rich girl. Her father is a wealthy rancher, so she and her brother are always very well dressed and have lots of fancy food in their lunch pails. She likes to show off her new dresses. She likes to gossip about other kids and other families in the district, especially with her best friend Margaret Turner. She struggles with her schoolwork but tries to be the teacher’s pet by bringing her gifts and candies.

William “Willy” Anderson, 9
Willy likes to brag about his father’s big ranch and their fancy house, but he is also self-conscious about the expensive clothes his mom makes him wear. He is often a troublemaker in class, and teases other children. The teacher recently took away his slingshot after he used it to zing a rock at the tail end of the Johnson mule and made it run away while the Johnson kids were riding it to school.

Margaret Turner, 12
Margaret is best friends with Nettie Anderson, although she is envious of Nettie’s fancy dresses. Being an only child, with no cousins in the area, and her dad at work all the time, Margaret is often lonely and tries to please other people so they will be her friends. Her father recently remarried, and Margaret doesn’t really like her new stepmother, but they both try to get along. She likes it when Nettie and Willy ask her to come to their house after school for dinner.

Jane Morris, 10
Jane is very smart and studies very hard. She often has her nose in a book, and usually spends the recess time reading. She wants to be a teacher when she grows up and likes to help teach the younger students. She always wins the spelling bee, even beating the older students.

Dick “Dicky” Morris, 9
Dickie is also very smart, and very shy. He is very good with animals, and likes helping his father take care of the sheep, especially the lambs. He also helps his mother take care of their flock of chickens. One day his favorite rooster, a big Rhode Island Red, followed him to school and remained outside the school building, strutting back and forth and crowing. Finally Dicky got up and went to the window and yelled, “Go away, darn you! I can’t learn anything in here, and neither can you!”

Effie Morris, 7
Just started school this year and wasn’t quite ready to leave her mama. She cries in class frequently, and still sucks her thumb. Sarah Morris often has to come over and hold her hand.

Jonah Butler, 14
Jonah is a kind, responsible boy and a natural leader. Other kids look up to him. Sometimes when younger students are acting out and causing trouble, the teacher just looks at Jonah, who will go over to the younger kid and talk to him quietly and get him back in line. He is a very devout Mormon and doesn’t like it when other boys use course language or tease other kids. He and his father built the corral and the three-sided “loafing shed” in the schoolyard for the animals that students ride to school.

Sarah Butler, 12
Sarah is also kind and soft-spoken, and likes to help take care of the younger children. She especially watches out for Minnie Silas, who adores her. Sarah and her sister Esther often bring in baked goods to share with the class. Her favorite subject is Poetry and Literature, and she knows many poems by heart and likes to recite them. She is good friends with Jane Morris, even though Jane is closer to her sister’s age.

Esther Butler, 11
Esther has a chatty, outgoing personality and has a hard time sitting still in class all day. She is always ready to start the games at recess, or help the teacher organize parties or activities. She also likes to bake with her mother and sisters, and thinks everything should be decorated to be as pretty as possible. She loves arts and crafts projects.

Naomi Butler, 9
Naomi is a bit of a dreamer and loves to read. She always asks the teacher if she can borrow any new storybooks that come into the classroom.  She also enjoys baking with her mother and likes to bring in cookies and other baked goods to share with her friends, especially the younger ones, Minnie Silas and Effie Morris. She looks up to Jane Morris and tries to compete with her at the spelling bee and reading lessons.

David Butler, 8
David loves nature and critters, and often brings in creatures like beetles, snakes and salamanders that he finds on his way to school. Unfortunately, these critters usually escape his pockets at inappropriate times during the school day.

Carleton Ready, 10
Carleton has a lot of energy and is quick with his fists. He hung out a lot with his cousins the Thornburgs, who were older than him, and they often got in fights if someone teased them or teased their sisters. Often they just fought among themselves. Carleton has a hard time sitting still through long lessons, and often taps his pencil on the desk or plays with his chalk until the teacher gets angry with him. For lunch he and his sister usually bring in a baked potato, because that is what their father grows. She rides a horse to school with his sister Christina.

Christina Ready, 13
Christina is a very chatty girl and likes to be the center of attention. She also likes to gossip about other kids and other families in the district, often competing with Nettie Anderson about who has the most exciting news. She likes being called on by the teacher and always raises her hand, even if she doesn’t know the answer. Sometimes when her brother and cousins get into a fight she’ll get in a few kicks too. She rides a horse to school with her brother Carleton.

Olevia Thornburg, 15
Olevia is the oldest in her family, and the oldest student in school, and she likes to think she is in charge, so she is often “bossy.” When the teacher tells the class to do something, Olevia will sometimes repeat it like she is in charge, and she watches to make sure that the kids follow orders. Often the teacher or the other kids call her “Olivia” instead of “Oleeva”, which is how it is pronounced in her family, and she always corrects them.

James Thornburg, 12
James is a talkative boy with a vivid imagination. He likes to make up stories and tell them to anyone who will listen. He also liked to gossip, so sometimes his stories about other people are not true at all. He is also interested in the various families in the county and likes to know who is related to who.

Raymond Thornburg, 7
Raymond is the youngest of the Thornburg kids, and the only one still in school. He usually hangs out with his cousin, Carleton Ready. Raymond isn’t as much of a fighter as his cousin, and is quieter and more studious. He likes arithmetic, and always tries to be the first one with the answer. He likes to build things, and he helped the Butler family build the horse shed outside the school. He and his father often help neighbors with building projects on their farms.

Clifford Dockery, 12
Clifford (Cliff) is the oldest of the twelve Dockery children. Since his family didn’t raise cattle or other animals for food, they mostly ate wild game for meat, so Clifford learned to hunt at an early age and is good at it. He likes being out in the hills he’s a good shot with a rifle. He is already good at shooting pheasants and sage grouse and knows how to dress and clean them so his mother can cook them. Clifford also loves horses, and usually helps take care of the horses and the mules that bring the other kids to school.

Thelma Dockery, 10
Thelma is shy but friendly. She has to help take care of younger brothers and sisters at home so she is good at helping the younger kids at school, too. She helps to keep an eye on her little brother John. She often brings in her mother’s delicious cinnamon rolls as a gift to the teacher. She is kind of a “teacher’s pet” and always offers to help with lessons and schoolhouse chores.

John Dockery, 8
John is a dreamy, absent-minded little boy who frequently forgets his lunch, or his hat, or his homework. He comes from a big family so sometimes his mom doesn’t have time to help him get ready for school. Sometimes he forgets how to act at school and leaves his desk to look out the window. His sister Thelma helps him when she can. He is friends with the Johnson twins.

FAMILIES OF THE MIDDLETON SCHOOL DISTRICT IN 1928

Johnson Family
(Loosely based on the family of Henry Johnson, aka “16 Mule Team Johnson”)
Father: Henry Johnson (born Hans Jensen, in Denmark.)
Mother: Louisa Johnson
Henry drives a freight wagon between Casper and Thermopolis, pulled by 16 mules. The family lives in a cabin on Buffalo Creek. They are known for their large vegetable garden and many fruit trees on their property. They have six children: Anna, 14; Hans, 12; Marie, 10; twins Harriet and Harold, 8, and little Frederick, 5. The school-aged children travel to school on a retired mule, with the younger ones riding and the older ones leading the mule. They are devout Lutherans, and the older children sing in the church choir.

Silas Family
Father: Hiram
Mother: Deceased (died in childbirth eight years ago)
The Silas family struggles to keep food on the table and a roof over their heads. Hiram does odd jobs for local farmers and ranchers for day wages. They currently live in a small shabby cabin in a remote corner of the Morris’ sheep ranch. Mr. Morris lets them live there for free if Hiram will keep an eye out, and a rifle ready, for wolves. Sometimes when Hiram is out of work and money is low he gets very depressed, and gets angry easily. There are two children: George, 11; and Minnie, 8. The father usually gives them a ride to school in his wagon on his way to whatever job he has at the time.

Anderson Family
Father: Charles
Mother: Elspeth (Ellie)
The Andersons own the largest cattle ranch on Owl Creek. It’s a two-section ranch (1280 acres) with about 450 head of cattle. Charles runs the ranch with the help of two hired hands. The family lives in a large house overlooking the creek. Mrs. Anderson makes sure her children have new fashionable clothes to wear to school. There are two children: Annette (Nettie), 13; and William (Willy), 9. The children are driven to school in the farm pickup (one of the first motor vehicles in the county) by one of the hired hands.

Turner Family
Father: Theodore (Ted)
Mother: Jane (Ted’s second wife)
Ted Turner runs the local saloon. His first wife up and left to move back east to her family, about three years ago. He recently married Jane, one of the women who worked in his saloon. They have only one child, Margaret, who is 12. The Anderson’s hired hand picks her up and takes her to school with the Anderson children.

Morris Family
Father: Charles
Mother: Elaine (second wife)
The Morris’ run a sheep ranch on Owl Creek, about XXX sheep on XXX acres. They live in a “soddy”, a log cabin with a sod roof. They have four children. The oldest, Glenn, is 29, a bachelor who still lives with the family. His mother was Charles’ first wife, who passed away many years ago. At 19 William was drafted and fought in Europe in World War 1. He suffered from severe shell shock (now called Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) from his experiences in the war, and he hardly talks to anyone. He avoids being around anyone except his family and prefers to be out on the range with the sheep. He drives the children to school in a wagon, and picks up the Butler children on the way. The other three children are Jane, 10; Dick, 9; and Effie, 7.

Butler Family
Father: Ammon
Mother: Ada
Ammon is the farrier in the county, travelling to farms and ranches to shoe horses. He is also a skilled carpenter. Ada is known to be the best baker in the county, and is training her daughters to bake beautiful breads, cakes, cookies and sweet rolls. They have eight children: Jonah, 14; Sarah, 12; Naomi, 9; David, 8; Benjamin, 5; Bonnie, 3; and baby Eden, 1. The Butlers are devout Mormons. Ammon’s parents immigrated from Illinois in the mid-1880s, headed to Utah, following the Mormon Trail. One of their horses threw a shoe as they travelled through Wyoming, and they had no extra shoes and no farrier in the group, so they settled in the Owl Creek area, and made sure that their son Ammon was trained to be a farrier. The school-aged children walk 2 ½ miles to school and back each day.

Thornburg Family
Father: Elbert (known as Leslie)
Mother: Mary (known as Mollie)
The Thornburgs were an actual family that lived in Hot Springs County and sent their younger kids to the Middleton School, and there are still many Thornburgs living in the county. Leslie and Mollie moved from Missouri with three children: Olevia, Mable and James.  They bought land on Missouri Flats, on the South side of Owl Creek, in 1913. Elbert cleared the land and began farming it. They had one more child, Raymond, in 1913. The family owned many horses so each child had their own horse to ride to school. The Thornburg kids spent a lot of time with their cousins, the Readys. They were always ready to fight anyone who called them names or “looked at ‘em wrong.” It was said that if they didn’t have anyone else to fight, they would just fight each other.

Ready Family
Father: Andy Ready
Mother: Nellie Ready
The Ready family was an actual family that lived in Hot Springs County and sent their kids to the Middleton School. There are still many Readys living in the county. As the children of the original grew up and started their own families, most of them built houses near the parents’ house. The Ready families lived along Owl Creek. Nellie and Andy Ready immigrated from Missouri around 1906 and bought 80 acres at the east end of the flats. The land was good for farming and they raised potatoes that they sold for other things that they needed. Nettie raised a vegetable garden and they canned vegetables for food that lasted all year. They had a few cows, hogs, chickens and turkeys that they raised for food. They had two children, Christina, (13) and Carlton (10). The children had to work hard on the farm, but they had fun playing with their cousins, the Thornburgs, when they were done with chores.

Dockery Family
Father: Charley
Mother: Lillie
The Dockery family was an actual family that lived in Hot Springs County and sent their kids to the Middleton School. Charley Dockery came west on the train from Missouri in 1913 with a load of cattle. He helped herd the cattle from the train station in Kirby out to the ranch on Owl Creek and ended up staying there, too. He found work with area farmers and ranchers, helping out with farming and also carpentry and painting jobs. He was also  known for “bootlegging” whiskey (making it illegally) and selling it to local miners, ranchers and saloons. He was a funny guy and liked a good time. His wife Lillie was teetotaler (never drank alcohol.) She stayed home and took care of the children – they had twelve! She was known as a great baker and a good seamstress. She made all of the clothes for the children, many out of flour sacks. The family never had much money, but were known to be fun-loving people and they had many friends.