Yorktown/Mt. Pleasant Historical Alliance and Museum

Alpha Omega Kindergarten 1963-1964

By Julie Musick for June 2023 Newsletter

Yorktown Schools didn’t offer kindergarten when my family moved from Muncie to Yorktown in 1963. I was already a seasoned kindergartener with 2 months under my belt at Garfield Elementary School. I already knew how to stand in line and share. I played well with others. At nap time I preferred to lie quietly on my rug by my friend, Linus Poe. I knew how to make a friend.

Although there was no public kindergarten in Yorktown, there was a private kindergarten–Alpha Omega. The cost was $3.50 a week to attend. That was a lot of money back then, so I had to choose between kindergarten or continuing tap dancing. I already “knew” how to tap dance. Playing with other children at a school sounded like more fun.

Alpha Omega Kindergarten was run by the Alpha Omega Federated Women’s Club. They formed their club in Yorktown in October 1952 and joined the Federation of Women’s Clubs. According to Muncie Newspapers, Mrs. Myron Lillie was tentatively the first president. Muncie Newspapers reported on the organization’s many community projects, reporting peaking in the 1960’s. Providing kindergarten in Yorktown was one of the many community activities. School was held on the top floor of the American Legion Building on Broadway.

The Alpha Omega Club wasn’t the first women’s club to start a school in Yorktown. The Yorktown Woman’s Club established a free kindergarten in their school as early as 1912.

Our teachers in the 1963-64 school year were Mrs. O’Hara and Mrs. Law. Many of the children with whom we attended kindergarten, graduated together from Yorktown High School in 1976.

We graduated with our little mortar board caps. I still remember dancing to ”Ballin’ the Jack” and singing “Oats, Peas, Beans and Barley Grow”. Alpha Omega Kindergarten graduated with these children. An “*” beside the name in the description means that the child also graduated from YHS in 1976.
Allen, Deborah; Bonnet, Jerry*; Bousman, Larry*; Burton, Jeff*; Clevenger, Eric; Clevenger, Larry*; DeWees, Richard; Fight, Kendra*; Fight, Kimberly*; Gale, Jerry*; Gillum, Anita; Grimes, Gregory; Hamilton, Nancy*; Johnson, James*; Lance, Sherry*; Libey, Douglas; Lynn, Michael*; Marvin, Bill*; McCormick, David*; Morris, John*; Morrow, Melinda*; Musick, Julie(*); Puckett, Tammy*; Richards, Kevin; Ritchie, William; Shores, Lisa; Spurgeon, Craig; Stanley, John*; Townsend, Paul; Turner, Wayne*; Warfel, Brenda*; Wilhoit, Michelle*; Woods, Charles 
1964 Alpha Omega Graduates
¨ Be kind¨ 
Share and take turns¨ 
Keep your hands to yourself¨ 
Play hard¨ 
Learn¨ 
Use your manners¨ 
Clean up after yourself¨ “
Take a nap when you can¨ 
A graham cracker goes down easier with chocolate milk¨ 
It’s okay to color outside of the lines¨ 
Four legs on the floor¨ 
Treat others as you want to be treated¨ 
Let others finish speaking before talking¨ 
Be a friend to all classmates¨ 
Follow directions¨ 
Everyone is an artist¨ 
Listen¨ 
Help each other¨ 
Learn from mistakes¨ 
Don’t run with scissors ¨ 
Always do your best
Some Life Lessons Learned from Kindergarten

1785 Land Ordinance-First Survey and Sale of Land

The Land Ordinance of 1785 was passed on May 20, 1785. It provided for the surveying of the Northwest Territory and Indiana Territory were the first to be surveyed under the new rectangular survey method.

The land was systematically surveyed into square townships, 6 mi (9.7 km) on a side, each divided into thirty-six sections of 1 sq mi (2.6 km2) or 640 acres (260 ha). These sections could then be subdivided for re-sale by settlers and land speculators.

It set up a standardized system whereby settlers could purchase title to land through land offices after the survey was complete. The location of the land was precise. In Central Indiana, that “open” land was called the “New Purchase”.

Because there was no method for Congress to raise revenue by direct taxation at this time, land purchased and won from the Native Americans provided an important revenue stream.

Layout of Township Sections Under New System