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Farewell, Little Red Schoolhouse

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  • Farewell, Little Red Schoolhouse

    Farewell, Little Red Schoolhouse
    BY Aida Rogers

    Lexington County Chronicle, SC
    May 22 2004

    Rep. Ted Pitts, right, presents Maro Rogers a proclamation from the
    state legislature at her retirement party Sunday while her husband,
    Hugh looks on.

    Hundreds of students wished their first teacher well when Maro K.
    Rogers held her final open house at the Little Red Schoolhouse in
    Lexington.

    Best estimates are that Rogers taught about 1,500 students in 41
    years at the kindergarten.

    She taught three generations in some families.

    "It's a part of what Lexington was then, and still is today,"
    said Anne Wilkins Brooks who, with her sister Sarah Wilkins Weiss,
    attended the school in the 1960s. Brooks enrolled her daughters Baker
    and Anna there.

    "It's literally pulling your child up to the white picket fence where
    Maro stands, waiting on your child. Each child gets out one at a time,
    and that's how they come out. You don't dump your kids off and leave
    them. It's an involvement."

    Rogers opened the Little Red Schoolhouse when, as a young mother
    of two, she realized there were no kindergartens nearby to educate
    her children.

    She and husband, former Lexington Mayor H. Hugh Rogers, built a
    kindergarten in their back yard on Fox Street.

    Helping teach was Rogers' mother, "Miss Mannig" Kouyoumjian, who
    played piano and banjo. Two more children were born, with all four
    attending the kindergarten.

    As the Rogers children got older, they helped with its annual Christmas
    and spring recitals, with Hugh Rogers appearing for 40 straight years
    as Santa Claus. At the 2003 Christmas recital, son Clifton took the
    role. Daughter Myda Rogers Tompkins has been teaching and providing
    piano accompaniment since 1991.

    "I learn all the time from my pupils," Rogers says. "I learned
    something just yesterday."

    And they have learned a lot from her.

    Rogers is Armenian and a native of Iraq. She came to America via a
    scholarship to Columbia College.

    At every Christmas recital, students sing "O Christmas Tree," in
    English and Armenian. Likewise, spring recitals of the past have
    featured Arabic and Gypsy dancing, as well as music and dancing of
    Japan, Hawaii, and the American South.

    The Little Red Schoolhouse has always been a kindergarten -- not a
    day care. Students learned their alphabet and took field trips to
    farms, grocery stores, the library, post office and museums. They
    did finger-painting and physical exercise.

    "It's much more than playing ball and making crafts," Anne Brooks said.
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