
Information from the 1904 H.H.S. Annual and 1924’s
Hicksville of
Today
From their earliest
histories, Hicksville and Hicksville Township were known for maintaining
schools of a high grade. The township was divided into nine sub-districts,
each with its own school board managing the concerns of its little—and
sometimes red—schoolhouse. In the village, Ranson Osborne taught the first
school of five pupils, and a small frame structure located on the NW corner
of High and Bryan Streets was cited as the first school building.
By
1874, a larger plot of land at the corner of Smith and Main Streets was
obtained for the purpose of building a larger school for the town’s growing
population. The first
graduating exercises were held in 1881 under the superintendency of T. Reese
Milleson at the first M. E. Church on Main Street. Mr. Milleson resigned
shortly before the next year’s graduation, and the class of 1882 did not
receive their diplomas for more than ten years when ceremonies were held in
August of 1892. Despite an addition to the original $15,000 four-room brick
structure, it was obsolete within 22 years and torn down.
In 1896, a larger and more substantial
schoolhouse was built by local contractors. By the 1920’s, township and
village schools were merged into the Hicksville Village School District.
This new district saw to the education of grades 1–12. (Kindergartens were
run privately until the 1940’s.) With laws suspending any district school
with an average attendance of ten or fewer students, four of the original
township schools had been closed and a fifth was on the brink of closure.
Pupils were then assigned to another township school or sent into the
village. Hicksville Village had 57 students from neighboring districts by
1924. With compulsory education bringing even more children to the school
population and new courses added to broaden education (i.e., home
economics, typing, bookkeeping), some classes were held in other buildings.
Graduations were held in churches or at the Huber Opera House. Rumblings for
a new building began in the same decade, but the 1896 building continued in
use. It was not demolished until 1959.

[Ed. Note: Despite the lingering effects of
the Depression, Hicksville citizens built a new high school in 1939 with the
addition of a junior high and gymnasium wing ready in time for the
graduating class of 1967. An elementary school was constructed at the corner
of North Bryan and Arthur Streets in the mid-1950’s. Voters in 2005 passed
levies needed to consolidate the Hicksville Schools at the east edge of town
in what was once George Wilderson’s orchard.]
Early Superintendents of Hicksville
Schools
from 1904 H.H.S. Annual