Beebe Hill Schoolhouse, which closed in 1918, is open again
The Falls Village-Canaan Historical Society replaced the Beebe Hill one-room schoolhouse’s woodburning stove and desks with replicas, painted the walls, and added books and other school materials, yet the place still feels like it is centuries old. Photo by Anabelle Baum

Beebe Hill Schoolhouse, which closed in 1918, is open again

FALLS VILLAGE — Like many schools this past year, the Beebe Hill One-Room Schoolhouse has been closed but is now reopening its doors to visitors and students of local history once again. 

In fact, the two entry doors tell a fair share of the schoolhouse’s history, which served students in grades one through eight from the 1840s until 1918. 

As was usual for the time, children often filed through the doors from youngest to oldest, with boys through one door and girls through the other. But once inside the one-room schoolhouse, both genders learned together. 

The separate doors can still be seen at the freshly painted schoolhouse, which sits on the edge of Beebe Hill Road, just off Route 7. 

While the building structure remains unchanged, some of the schoolhouse has been restored by the Falls Village-Canaan Historical Society. Society members replaced the woodburning stove and desks with replicas, painted the walls, and added books and other school materials — yet the place still feels centuries old. 

On the walls hang crinkled class photos, a framed portrait of Abraham Lincoln, a small watercolor painting of the schoolhouse, and other memorabilia. 

Dispersed throughout the schoolhouse are worn grammar and geography books, some on bookshelves, some on benches. 

In the center of the schoolhouse sit the desks, all mismatched in size, facing a large slate blackboard. At the front of the room sits the largest desk, belonging to the only teacher of the schoolhouse, who at one point was tasked with teaching a class of 37 pupils. 

Tours at the Beebe Hill Schoolhouse will be held in July and August on Saturdays from 10 a.m. to noon. Visitors who are not vaccinated are asked to wear masks. 

There is no need to schedule a visit in advance; admission is free, and someone will be waiting at the schoolhouse to give tours.

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