Trunk exhibits at schoolhouse


AMENIA — What is a trunk exhibit? Nope, it has nothing to do with elephants. It is a portable exhibit about a local history topic that is packed up in a trunk, with vintage items (slates, quill pens, dunce caps, a school bell, a lunch pail, books and lists of activities).

The exhibit travels to classrooms and organizations to introduce the programs at Indian Rock Schoolhouse. Any group may borrow the trunk, unpack it, and have a schoolhouse experience right in their classroom or meeting place. It means that more and more children and adults will hear about Indian Rock School. And it means that Kay Kane will be remembered.

Memories of Kane, the late one–room schoolhouse teacher at the Leedsville School, are preserved through a memorial fund established to provide trunk exhibits which will travel to local schools, organizations and senior centers.

Kanwe, who died at age 93 in July, was a life member of the Schoolhouse Association and one of the last of this area’s living one-room school teachers. She had taught in the Leedsville School on Route 343 in Amenia from 1935 until it closed in 1943, later retiring from teaching at Webutuck.

Kane’s reminiscences of her early years as a country school teacher launched a series of newspaper stories on the more than 20 rural schools that served Amenia and Northeast – today’s Webutuck Central School District

Ginny Eschbach, one of Kane’s three surviving daughters, said, "Our mother got a great deal of pleasure from the restoration of the Indian Rock School with the association’s programs which look back at the old days. She would be delighted with the trunk exhibits!"

The first trunk, entitled "A Trip to the One-room Schoolhouse," was prepared this winter and two social studies classes at Maplebrook School were the first to unpack all the old-time school treasures.

They had a fine time testing, looking, discussing and reading the enclosed materials. In fact, the students liked the trunk so much that their teacher, Jessica Coviello, asked to use it for another week. The students have promised to give the committee ideas about the most interesting items in the portable collection and to make suggestions for improvement.

Joan Murphy, Tilly Strauss, Mary Ellen Downey and Ann Linden lead the groups assisted by Donna Konkolics, head of school at Maplebrook, who made a special presentation about her schoolteacher grandmother. The trunks usually do not have presenters since they are designed to be self-explanatory, with many suggestions for activities and lesson plans.

The idea for trunk exhibits is not an original one. The Dutchess County Historical Society has had an entire set of trunk shows for years and many museums in the western United States depend on this medium for transporting replicas of items in their collections to remote locations.

The trunk shows fill the seasonal void in programs at the schoolhouse during the winter. Being able to present local history to students of all ages will also enhance the educational component of Indian Rock’s mission.

To have a trunk exhibit, contact IndianRockschool@aol.com or write to Indian Rock Schoolhouse, PO Box 172, Amenia, NY 12501.

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