Photo by
See-Tennessee.com
Sam Houston
Schoolhouse: Tennessee's
Oldest
MARYVILLE, Tenn. - Tucked away amid the foothills
of East Tennessee is the oldest one-room log
schoolhouse in the state. Built two years before
Tennessee became a state, the schoolhouse in Blount
County is named for former Tennessee Gov. Sam Houston
who opened the schoolhouse and served as one of its
instructors.
"Teaching at the little on-room schoohouse gave
Gov. Houston the greatest satisfaction more than
anything else he had done," said Maxine Flynn Davis,
secretary of the Sam Houston Schoolhouse Guild. "He
added so much to Tennessee. He was before his
time."
Listed on the National Register of Historic Sites,
the Sam Houston Schoolhouse was built in Maryville,
Tenn., in 1794 by two local families. Students,
ranging in age from 6 to 60, paid $8 to attend classes
that were in session according to a farmer's calendar.
Classes began after corn-planting in the spring and
ended at harvest time in the fall.
"The schoolhouse is an honor to Houston's teaching
ability," said Ralph Grindstaff, retired manager of
the Sam Houston Schoolhouse.
The Sam Houston Schoolhouse is open year-round
(except the month of January) Tuesday through
Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday 1 p.m. to 5
p.m.
Admission is $1 for ages 10 and up. Children are
free.
Housed in this structure are a number of reading
materials from the 19th century, including books of
the Lliad, which Houston used to educate
himself.
Visitors also will find benches for students, the
teacher's desk and a fireplace used to warm the
room.
Included on the grounds is a museum displaying
items used during Houston's time when he taught there
in the early 1800s.
"What seems to get the greatest notice is the
genealogy of Sam Houston," Grindstaff said. "One
complete wall (of the museum) is devoted to this."
Another interesting item is a pair of brass
knuckles with Sam Houston's name inscribed on it.
We found it over the doorway of the schoolhouse,
but we don't know much about it," Grindstaff said.
Born in Virginia, Houston and his family moved to
the Maryville area in 1807 when he was 14. After his
teaching stint at the local schoolhouse, he studied
law in Nashville.
Houston was highly active in both the military and
politics.
"He's accomplished things in his life that have
never been duplicated," Grindstaff said. "He ranks
high on the list of important people."
Houston was attorney general and a two-term
congressman while in Tennessee. Years later, after
relocating to Texas, he became governor and president
of the Republic of Texas, making him the only
individual serving as governor of two states. Houston
left his mark in Texas by liberating it from Mexican
rule and annexing it to the United States.
People believe that had Houston run the country,
students would be learning a different American
history in the classroom.
"Had the South followed Sam Houston," Davis said,
"he would've been president over Lincoln in 1861, and
chances are, there would've been no Civil War between
the states."
The Sam Houston Schoolhouse sees approximately
8,000 to 10,000 visitors each year. Its grounds
provide a peaceful setting for gatherings. Raven Hall,
named for Houston's official Cherokee Indian name when
he briefly lived with that tribe, provides a pavilion
facility for picnics and other social gatherings
adjacent to the log cabin structure.
The schoolhouse continues to cater to students. One
of its annual events devotes a day in May to
neighboring Porter School. Houston attended what was
Porter Academy in his day, which was the forerunner to
Porter High School and now Maryville College.
The "Sam Houston era" (which actually spanned 70
years) ended in Huntsville, Texas, in 1863.
To read more about Sam
Houston, Grindstaff refers adult readers to The
Raven by Marquis James (a biography of Sam
Houston) and Sam Houston by James L.
Hailey.
Younger readers will enjoy
Liberty, Justice and F'rall by Marjorie
Kutchinski and the periodical "Sam Houston," Vol. 15,
Sept. 1994 by Cobblestone Press.
To find the Sam Houston
Schoolhouse coming from Knoxville, take Highway 33
South toward Maryville and turn left onto Sam Houston
Schoolhouse Road. Follow Sam Houston Schoolhouse
signage.
For additional information
and about the schoolhouse, please call (865)
983-1550.
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