Margot Liberty has written a warm and memorable account of the everyday struggles and triumphs of teaching in an isolated, one-room schoolhouse in the 1950s. She gives us a very personal glimpse into a unique time and place in the American West that might otherwise have been forgotten."" - Pamela Smith Hill, author of <i>Laura Ingalls Wilder: A Writer's Life</i><br /><br />""A charming book and a pleasurable read. Margot Liberty's memoir of teaching in a one-room schoolhouse in a sparsely populated corner of Montana seems timeless, yet its setting in the early 1950s gives us a glimpse of a little-studied, changing, postwar West."" - Mary Murphy, coeditor of <i>Montana Legacy: Essays on History, People, and Place</i>
Margot's school was located on the SH Ranch, whose owner needed a way to retain his hired hands after their children reached school age. Few teachers wanted to work in such remote and primitive circumstances. Margot lived alone in a ""teacherage,"" hardly more than a closet at one end of the schoolhouse. It had electricity but no phone, plumbing, or running water. She drew water from a well outside. The nearest house was a half-mile away. Margot had a car, but she had to park it so far away, she kept her saddle horse, Orphan Annie, in the schoolyard.
Miss Margot started with no experience and no supplies, but her spunk and inventiveness, along with that of her seven students, made the school a success. Evocative of Laura Ingalls Wilder's school-teaching experiences some eighty years earlier, Horseback Schoolmarm gives readers a firsthand look at an almost forgotten - yet not so distant - way of life.