HISTORY OF EDUCATION IN PASCO COUNTYHudson SchoolMore pictures of schools at Hudson are on the Hudson pictures page. This page was last revised on June 9, 2020. The first school was established here was called the Lang School, as the community was not yet known as Hudson. Benjamin Lee Blackburn (1852-1940) is said to have been the first teacher. According to Brenda Knowles, the Lang School was located where the Sea Pines subdivision is now. Hernando County school board minutes of Oct. 1877 show Lang’s School with trustees W. M. Lang, W. G. Frierson, and D. J. Strange. No teacher or dates for the 1877-78 school term are listed, implying the school may not have operated that year. Charles William Malachi Lang (1837-1908) was an early settler in the Hudson area. According to Ash, a log schoolhouse was built on Lang’s property in 1881. His homestead is today in the golf course in the Sea Pines subdivision. An 1878-79 list of Hernando County schools shows Lang’s school with trustees Wm. Lang, W. G. Frierson, and D. Fillman. The teacher is shown as James M. Neil. An 1879-80 list of Hernando County schools shows B. L. Blackburn as the teacher. An 1883-84 list of Hernando County schools shows the Hudson School with teacher J. S. Bryan and trustees William Lang, W. G. Frierson, and J. W. Hudson. Henry Clay Bush (1857-1906), later a surveyor, is said to have been a teacher at the Lang School. According to a newspaper article by Ralph Bellwood, the Lang School was named for the builder. According to Brenda Knowles, the Hays and Lang schools were the same school, and it was built with logs. In a 1972 interview for West Pasco’s Heritage, Mrs. J. M. Mitchell recalled:
According to an article by Julie J. Obenreder in West Pasco’s Heritage:
According to The Story of Hudson, Florida (1973):
School board minutes of Sept. 5, 1887, show Hays School, no. 20. Trustees are Jesse Hay, C. Stevenson, and William Lang. [C. Stevenson was Constantine Stevenson, according to Brenda Knowles.] School board minutes of Dec. 3, 1887, show Hudson School, no. 20, with a total enrollment of 30 and an average attendance of 9. A deed shows that on Feb. 8, 1888, property in S23 T24 R16 was transferred for $1 to the School Board of Pasco County, consisting of G. W. Bearden, J. W. Higgins, M. Jones, Stephen Weeks, and W. B. Hay. School board minutes of March 5, 1888, have: “A deed from the Cootie Improvement Company for two acres of land was presented, upon which is located the Hudson School house No. 20. As there are two small schools in this vicinity, near together, the Board is of the opinion that it would probably be best to consolidate the two. Supt. is instructed to inquire into the matter and report at next regular meeting,. and the Board withholds its acceptance of the deed for the present.” Minutes of the school board meeting of Feb. 4, 1889, show that the school trustees had requested funds for a heating stove costing $4.50. School board minutes of Aug. 8, 1889, show the teacher at school no. 20 was C. Stevenson. County commission minutes of May 2, 1892, refer to a new schoolhouse in Hudson. School board minutes of July 1, 1895, have: “On motion a public school was established for the present at Hudson with M. L. Mosely supervisor. Name Hudson School #31.” School board minutes of Aug. 2, 1897, show the teacher at the Hudson school (no. 14) was Ella Goshorn. School board minutes of Aug. 1, 1898, show the teacher was Kate Littell. A roster of pupils for 1904-05 shows Mr. Lash was the teacher. [This could have been John Lash, age 30 in the 1910 census, born in Finland.] School board minutes of July 3, 1905, show the principal was Katie Littell Riggins and the assistant was Bessie Miller. A 1909 photograph shows Mr. and Mrs. Terrill as the teachers. Minutes of 1912 show Winnifred Lee as a teacher, apparently at Hudson. A directory for 1915-1916 shows D. Foster as the teacher with a Hernando Co. certificate. At the school board meeting of July 3-5, 1916, D. Foster was appointed the teacher at Hudson for a special term. School board minutes of Sept. 4-5, 1916, show D. Carl Cripe appointed the teacher. The Tampa Morning Tribune of July 29, 1918, carries a classified ad: “WANTED—Teacher for Hudson School of 40 pupils. State salary; give reference. Address J. B. Hudson, Hudson, Fla.” In August 1919, Mr. A. E. Lane was appointed the teacher. In March 1920 the school board members, county superintendent, and attendance officer inspected the schools in western Pasco County. Their notes show: “Hudson school was found to be temporarily closed on account of influenza, about 16 per cent of the entire population confined to bed by flu. Board took note of decayed condition of roof of building.” On Dec. 2, 1921, the Dade City Banner reported, “HUDSON. November 29.—Our teacher, Miss Jessie Raulerson, went to Tampa last Wednesday to visit friends and has not returned yet.” Alice Linkey spent five months as a teacher in Hudson in 1922-23, as she recalled in a 1970 newspaper interview. (She actually recalled that it was 1921-22, but apparently it was in fact 1922-23.) She was a student at Falconer High School in New York and came to Florida in 1922 to take a course at a Dade City summer school which, she recalled, was conducted by the County Superintendent of Education. She received her certificate to teach and came to Hudson in September 1922 to take over the local school located east of what is now U. S. 19. The term was five months. The salary was $70 per month or $350 for the entire term. The Dade City Banner of Sept. 8, 1922, reported, “School opened in Hudson this Monday morning with an attendance of twenty-two pupils. The board of trustees and some of the patrons were present at the opening, showing unusual interest in school affairs. Miss Alice Linkey of Zephyrhills is in charge and was accompanied to Hudson by her parents, sisters, and brother, who returned to Zephyrhills in the afternoon. Miss Linkey will make her home with Mrs. Gregg Davis.” Later she attended FSU and graduated in 1926. On July 14, 1922, the Dade City Banner reported, “Superintendent E. B. O’Berry and the county school board took a jaunt to Hudson Tuesday to inspect the school house and also the Baptist church building which has been offered the board in place of the school building which was wrecked by the hurricane last October. The membership of the church has dwindled till there are only about three left who are unable to maintain regular services and they have offered to sell their edifice to the board for the same or lower price than the school building can be repaired for. If the present building can be disposed of the board will probably accept the offer.” A Sept. 1923 newspaper article reported that the Hudson school had grown to the point where it became necessary to appoint two teachers. On July 11, 1924, the Dade City Banner reported that Miss Edith Paramore was appointed a teacher at Hudson. On Sept. 21, 1926, the Dade City Banner reported, “As usual at this time of the year, everything revolves around the schoolhouse and very properly so. The Hudson school has two efficient teachers, Mrs. Katherine Riggins, principal, and Miss Vahey of New Port Richey, assistant. The grades taught are up to and including the sixth, with an enrollment of 39.” A 1927 map located an unnamed school in the NE ¼ of the SW ¼ of Section 27. School board minutes of Aug. 9, 1928, show Kate Riggins and Ila O’Berry as the teachers. In June 1929 a newspaper reported that Mrs. Kate Riggins will teach at Hudson. On Nov. 22, 1930, a newspaper article reported that Miss Florence Sessoms was the teacher at Hudson. On Aug. 6, 1931, a newspaper article reported that Mrs. S. A. Glass was approved by the school board to be the teacher at the Hudson school. She is also shown as the teacher in Feb. 1934. (Mrs. Alton Glass is the married name of Florence Sessoms.) On Sept. 4, 1936, the Dade City Banner reported that Mrs. Lettie E. Bareford was appointed teacher at the Hudson School. On May 25, 1945, the New Port Richey Press reported: “Fire of undetermined origin destroyed the school house at Hudson on Monday afternoon shortly after 5 o’clock. The New Port Richey fire department was called to the scene and arrived quickly, but were unable to stem the blaze. The Hudson school taught up to the 7th grade.” According to The Story of Hudson, Florida (1973):
At a meeting in September 1953, the School Board discussed the possibility of closing the Hudson school, which had an enrollment of 13 pupils. No final decision was made. The teacher in 1954-55 Mrs. Marguerite Gooding. On Aug. 24, 1955, the School Board voted to close Hudson School because of low enrollment. On Sept. 14, 1955, the St. Petersburg Times reported:
In 1962 the vacant school building and 1.5 acres of land were sold to the Hudson Community Club, Inc., for $2,250. In a 1960 interview, Jennie Sheldon (Keller) recalled that she was principal of a two-teacher school in Hudson where 55 pupils in one room were taught grades 1 through 6. No date is given. Hudson Elementary SchoolHudson Elementary School opened in its own building 1967, although it operated at first in the old Gulf Junior High School building. A newspaper article at the time reported that it was the first new school building in Hudson since 1932. The school board voted to close the school at the end of the 2019-20 school year. |