Cozy Corner School –
District 8
The school in Cozy Corner was built in
1913 in the southeast corner of Section 18 on land leased
from W. R. Happe, Sr.
Herman Kettel built the basement wall.
Arthur and Edwin Happe did the carpenter work on the
building. The toyal cost of the building was about
$1,550.
The officers of the first board were
Gordon Davis, clerk, F. M. Chitwood, director, and C.
A. Happe, treasurer.
The members of the Building Committee
were Richard Beilke, George VerKilen, and Arthur Happe.
There were 43 legal voters in the new
district.
The first term of school started January
5, 1914 with Vera Pietenpol of Granton as teacher.
On July 7, 1919, the school was named Cozy Corner School.
Larry Fagan, Withee, was the teacher when the school
closed in June 1959.
East Fremont School
In 1957, when all the rural schools had
been divided into High School Districts, the Marshfield
School System built the East Fremont School to accommodate
the children in grades 1 through 6 from Chili and rural
Marshfield area. Lunches were prepared in Marshfield
and delivered daily to the school cafeteria.
Forestside School
The town board set the boundaries of
Forestside School in 1884. The school closed in
1959 and consolidated with the Marshfield school district.
Ice Cream
Social
1919 Class Photo
(written on the back: "Part of Forestside School Pupils
1919"); contributed by
Kent Alexander.
Forestside Class (undated)
Forestside School – 1940
Back row left to right:
Ruth Davis, Helen Green, Norma Bartz, Pauline Geldernick,
Teacher: Vivian, “Drescher” Thiede, Norman Meissner,
James Geldernick, Silas Kleinschmidt, Walter Davis.
Second row standing:
Verna Grobe, Margie Montag, holding the flag are Delores
Peterson, Mae Baumgartner, Arlene Bartz, Gladys Green,
Audrey Bump, Evelyn Bartz, Joan Drescher.
Third row:
Jr. Patek, Glenn Kleinschmidt, Willard Geldernick, Norbert
Kleinschmidt, Douglas Meissner, Percy Bump, Richard
Geldernick, James Green.
Bottom row:
Wayne Green, Warren Patek, Norman Davis, Everett Bartz,
Elmer Grobe, and Robert Geldernick.
Fremont School – District 5
Town of Fremont 1912
– 1913 Ora Davis, Teacher
The Town Board set the boundaries for
this school in 1884. The first school was built
in 1911. The second school was built in 1922.
The school closed in 1942. The school was consolidated
into Cozy Corner School. Later they joined the
Granton School District.
Grant School – District 5
Little information exists about this
school. It was a white frame building. The
school closed in the late 1950s. The students
were transferred into the Marshfield School District.
The building burned in the 1960s.
Heathville School – District 1
The first Heathville school was built
in 1870. It was a small log school house, located
one mile east of the present site, across the road from
what is not the Ron Sheppard Farm, which was then in
Town of Weston. The first teacher was Joe Marsh.
In 1880 the old school house was torn
down and a new modern og house school was built.
It was named after Andrew Heath, an early settler of
the area.
The first church services the early ssettlers
attended was held in Heathville school with Rev. Benton,
a Presbyterian minister officiating. The log school
was used until a frame school was built in 1900.
The first teacher in the new school was Lessie Heath
Davis. A school term was 2-1/2 months.
In 1903, there were 47 students enrolled.
In 1902 the frame building was destroyed
by a fire. School was held in a house rented from
Henry Knoll, Sr. until the spring of 1921.
In the fall of 1921 a modern school was
opened. In 1946 the school was closed and the
students were transferred to schools in Valley View,
Cozy Corner, and Romadka in the Town of York.
In 1950 the school was reopened under
the Loyal School District. The school was finally
closed in 1964. The last school teacher was Betty
Picus.
Pine Circle School – District 3
The school building for Town of Fremont
School District Number Three was built about 1893 on
a site one and one half miles south of Chili.
It was moved in November 1906 to the southeast corner
of Section 28 on land purchased from Louis and Mary
Lindow in.
William Lindow remembers that the ten
to fifteen foot tall pine trees were dragged in and
planted around the school while he was writing his eighth
grade examinations.
In 1920 the name Pine Circle School was
chosen by its teacher Nelda Drescher, now Mrs. Harry
Schlinsog, and the school board.
The school was closed in December 1958.
Marlyn and Mary Lindow purchased the land and buildings.
It is interesting to note that there
have been members of the Lindow family in this building
continuously, either as owners or students, since it
was built.
Pine Circle
Valley View School – District 9
Valley View School was created by the
Fremont Town Board in 1915. The school was built
the same year. The school was closed in 1957 and
the students were transferred to the Loyal School District.
The school building was sold and was is still standing
in the Town of York (1973). The one acre of land
went back to the adjoining farm owned by Robert Rollins.
Sources: This information
was transcribed from the Town of Fremont History Book
and contributed by
Kent Alexander.