The Lucknow Sentinel, 1975-07-16, Page 3OPEN
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915 'WEDNESDAY, JULY 16„1975 THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL LUCKNOW, ONTARIO PAGE THREE
Teacher Retires At Plymouth, Michigan
After 46 Years As An Educator;
Suggest Naming School Wing After Her
The following article appeared in
the June 26 issue of the Plymouth,
Michigan Observer and Eccentric:
It concerns the retirement from the
teaching profession of Mrs. Ken-
neth (Dorothy) MacKenzie of
Ashfield Township.
PLYMOUTH TOWNSIVP - The
years often wipe memories of names and places clean, but
students at Farrand elementary School will always• know the name of teacher Dorothy Sly Ma:ckenzie.
Farrand PTO members Tuesday presented the , long time veteran of the Plymouth
Community School District a Com-
memoration plaque and named
school's southwest wing in her
honor.
Mrs. MacKenzie,. 66, whose
family once owned the land on
which Farrand School stands, will
'retire Saturday from her 46-year
teaching career.
The 1927 gradtiate of Plymouth
Central High School will retire with
her husband, Kenneth, on their
farm in Lucknow, Ontario.
But Mrs. MacKenzie, who spent
her youth in an old farmhouse on
Five Mile, will take many memor-
ies with her.
"I've live around here all my
life," said Farrand's third grade
teacher, "and I'll miss Plymouth a
lot. I've seen the area change from
a small to .a large community."
In Mrs. MacKenzie's day, stud-
ents attended old Central High
building for grades one through, 12.
Students unable to attend the old
building on.Main Street, which now
houses elementary and middle
school grades, travelled to oneroom
country schoolhouses for primary
school subjects.
About one-third of Mrs. Mac-
Kenzie's 1927 graduating class
started off to college,- the veteran
teacher recalls. .
"Some of them had to drop otit.gf
high school before they graduTt-
ed," she admitted. "They had to
go to work." 0 After high school graduation
ceremonies', Mrs. MacKenzie at-
tended Ypsilanti Normal School,
now 8astern Michigan University,
where she earned her bachelors
degree in elementary education.
She spent the first three years of
her 46-year teaching career in the
Dearborn School District before
returning to Plymouth..> Until
Farrand School was built in 1958,
Mrs. MacKenzie taught in Central
Elementary School, where her
former fifth grade teacher, Nellie
E. Bird, served as. principal.
Mrs. MacKenkie requested a
transfer to Farrand, when she
learned it would be built on her
parents' former land.
"When I first came to Plymouth
td teach, we had to buy all our own
supplies like pencils and paper
clips," Mrs. MacKenzie recalled
with a laugh. "The school buys all
that for us now."
"Things keep changing back and
forth," she said of teaching
methods. "We'll be doing things a
certain way, - and then they'll
change. There'll be a repeat of the
old methods every now and then."
"Farrand teacher Jim Grinenko
affectionately suggested naming of,
the school's southwest wing in
honor of Mrs. MacKenzie at a
recent retirement banquet," said
Farrand Principal Anne Welch.
"The PTO board wanted to know
what to give her as a, gift, and they
took up his suggestion!"
Music Results
Heather-Ann Stapleton received
76 marks in her grade four London
Conservatory Piano Exams. She is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Neil
Stapleton of West •Wawanosh
Township •and pupil of Mrs. Ann
Baker of St. Thomas.
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