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An era gone, not forgotten

The Newton Kansan

An era gone, not forgotten

Newton's Prudence Price taught school in a different era - one long over, but not quite forgotten. Price began her teaching career, which lasted more than 43 years, as a one-room school teacher in Furley. "I'd never been in a one-teacher school," she wrote in her autobiography. "It was an experience. I had all grades, taught all subjects." Price died Monday at the age of 94. Her funeral service will be at 10 a.m. Monday at Presbyterian Manor. Price was born June 5,  1912, in Cordell, Okla. The family moved to Kansas, and Price spent her first two years of school attending classes at McKinley Elementary - now McKinley Administrative Center on East First.

Her father, William Romine, owned a dealership for Overland and Willy-Knight cars.

It was an eight-passenger Willy-Knight that transported the family to California following her first-grade year. The family moved back to Newton where she completed school.

She attended Wichita Municipal University for two years where she earned a teaching certificate.

"I rode the street car to school for five cents," she wrote. "If I could 'hitch a ride,' I could buy a five-cent hamburger or a candy bar."

She taught school in the middle of the Great Depression, earning a salary of $520 a year.

She later was hired to teach eighth grade in the Arkansas Avenue school near Wichita, serving as principal from 1942 to 1946.

She was active in the Sedgwick County Teacher's Association and was the first woman elected president of the organization.

"I never served my term as president," Price wrote. "I was hired to teach 1A and 2B at the Old Fairmount school in Wichita. When Isley was built, I taught second grade there."

In 1952 she married D.V. Price and moved to Texas, but she kept teaching. Following his death in 1972 Prudence Price moved back to Newton, where she taught bridge at the Newton Activity Center and founded musical groups.

She started "Newton's Newest Novelty Band," a group of 12 ladies who put together musical programs. She also sang with the "Golden Notes" senior choirs, organized the "Sunbeams" choir at Presbyterian Church and the harmonica band "Blowhards."

She wrote her own life story in 1997.

Memorials have been established with First Presbyterian Church and the donor's favorite charity in care of the funeral home.


Owner/SourceHarvey County Genealogical Society
Date18 Feb 2006
Linked toPrudence Eva (Romine) Price

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