Blackboards from 1917 discovered while renovating classroom
Posted: 2015-06-11 11:42am
http://www.littlethings.com/1917-chalkb ... paign=quiz
Click the link to see the pics and the video. It's actually pretty neat...especially some of the teaching methods that are no longer used. Check out that multiplication wheel. I'm still trying to figure out how that works...any math majors here care to take a crack at it?I love history — but for me, the magic of the past doesn’t lie in complicated dates, exotic locations, or famous figures. To me, it’s the everyday stuff that’s truly fascinating; the comings and goings of normal people just living life.
After all, as our saying here goes, “It’s the little things in life that matter the most!” So why shouldn’t that apply to history as well?
That’s why I absolutely love this story. No, it won’t make breaking news, and it won’t alter any textbooks — but this discovery from days-gone-by perfectly captures a little slice of American history.
During the autumn months of 1917 — a year in which the first jazz record was released, the Ford Model T ran the roads, and the “Great War” waged on — a classroom in Oklahoma City received new blackboards.
Though it’s a rather mundane moment in history, this simple act preserved a sliver of time that would remain undiscovered and undisturbed for one hundred years. Now, its rediscovery is delighting people across the nation — myself included!