Wilson School
Rosebud, Falls Co., Texas
Located
4 miles west of Rosebud on SH 53 1 mile south on FM 1963; 4 miles west on FM
1671
WILSON, TEXAS (Falls County). Wilson is a small rural community seven miles
southwest of Rosebud on Farm Road 1671 in southern Falls County. In 1905 the
local school had 108 students and two teachers. Two businesses, a school, and
several scattered houses marked the town on county highway maps in the late
1940s. The Wilson school was consolidated with the Rosebud Independent School
District in 1954. Two businesses appeared on maps of the area in the late
1980s, but no population estimates for the community were available. The
population was forty-two in 2000.
Vivian Elizabeth Smyl
Year
Marker Erected: 1997

The Wilson School that once stood here traced its history to the 1890s,
when entrepreneur William Anderson Barclay deeded one acre of land for a
schoolhouse. Typical of many rural schools in Texas in the late nineteenth
century, the Wilson School was functional in design. Built of clapboard
construction and topped with a shingle roof, the building contained three
rooms. Two rooms were classrooms; one for grades one through four, the second
for grades five through eight. The third room was a communal room shared by
both classes. Ray Hodges served as one of the earliest teachers here. During
the depression of the 1930s payment to the two teachers was often delayed, and
barter was sometimes used instead of money. The average graduating class was
four or five students, many of whom served with distinction in World War II. In
1950 the Wilson School District was absorbed into the Rosebud Independent
School District as part of the Gilmer-Aikin Minimum Standards Education Bill
passed by the Texas Legislature. The school building was dismantled in 1955;
only a few physical reminders remain to mark the site.