Medicine Hat News

New kids on the Block

- Sally Sehn Sally Sehn is a past member of the heritage resources committee, City of Medicine Hat. Credit: Nat Flaig.

At the top of Division Avenue SW, near Swirls, stands a Craftsman style heritage home that once served as the Jack and Jill Kindergart­en, a well-attended post-war private school operated by Sarah Caroline (Lina) Flaig from 1949 to 1961.

Lina and husband Fred Flaig purchased the historic home with the intention of creating a kindergart­en. A qualified teacher, Lina had previously taught at several rural and public schools. A private school was her next goal.

The house the Flaigs purchased at 44 - 4 St. SW, was built in 1913 by local carpenter Nathan Calder at a cost of $4,500.00. A 1913 map reveals that it is one of the first homes ever built on this block. The one and a half-storey building features many Craftsman style characteri­stics such as a low-pitched roof with a single dormer, exposed rafter tails, and a large front porch, since enclosed, made of natural stone.

Lina’s plans were to convert the upper level into the kindergart­en headquarte­rs. Blackboard­s and a classroom with tables and benches were added. Two small playrooms were set up for boys and girls and there was one large “marching” room. Once a week, Mrs. Flaig showed the children films received through the Public Library, in a room downstairs. Outside, playground equipment such as slides, swings, teeter-totters, as well as jungle gyms were set up for the children. A maximum of thirty pupils were taught for 2 1/2 hours in a morning or afternoon class.

Kindergart­en, developed in 19th century Germany, was a term meaning “garden of children” based on the principle that children needed to be nurtured like plants in a garden. The popular pre-school concept spread worldwide. In Canada, the first private kindergart­en opened in 1870 and the first public kindergart­en in 1882. Fueled by the baby boom, kindergart­ens really took off after World War II. In 1947, Lina Flaig took over the local Cuyler House kindergart­en until she establishe­d Jack and Jill in 1949.

By the early 1960s, both the national and provincial government­s were taking a closer look at early childhood education, classroom sizes, and integratio­n of kindergart­ens into the public school system. Locally, more regulation­s were being placed on the private kindergart­ens. The last class to graduate from the Jack and Jill Kindergart­en was in 1961. In the same year, Lina

Flaig returned to the public school system and became the first Grade One teacher at the newly built Crestwood School. A few years later, at the age of fifty-eight, she obtained her B.Ed. In 1992, she was recognized with a provincial award for her contributi­on to early childhood education.

The Flaig family resided in the Fourth Street home for over 40 years. When it was sold in the 1990s, the upstairs kindergart­en was perfectly intact. The homeowner today, a preschool teacher, has a special connection to the house. Her grandmothe­r was a Jack and Jill graduate from the class of 1953.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY NAT FLAIG ?? Lina Flaig and the Jack and Jill Kindergart­en class of 1953.
PHOTO COURTESY NAT FLAIG Lina Flaig and the Jack and Jill Kindergart­en class of 1953.
 ?? PHOTO COURTESY ESPLANADE ARCHIVES ?? The former Jack and Jill Kindergart­en located upstairs 1983
PHOTO COURTESY ESPLANADE ARCHIVES The former Jack and Jill Kindergart­en located upstairs 1983
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada