
Customize your fundraiser by choosing from 36 unique shapes and scents.Unique fundraising product to set your organization apart.Reach your goals with our best-selling product, the Freshie!.

(You can sign up at the bottom of the page.) This year we are offering two different programs that both feature our high-quality, Texas-made FRESHIES, our best-selling product in 2021. We’ve partnered with PTAs / PTOs, bands, choirs, cheer groups, dance and drill teams, scouts, church groups, gymnastic groups, FFA chapters, 4H clubs, youth sports teams and many others over our decade plus time in the fundraising business. By 1966, the one-room country school had become a thing of the past.Fredericksburg Farms has been helping organizations raise money to meet their fundraising goals for over 15 years. School districts consolidated, pooling their resources to provide more teachers, broader curriculum, and opportunity for extracurricular activities. Equipped with little more than a blackboard and a few textbooks, teachers passed on to their pupils cultural values along with a sound knowledge of the three Rs.īy the turn of the century, the population began to shift to the cities and country schools began to lose students and tax support. She had to be a nurse, janitor, musician, philosopher, peacemaker, wrangler, fire stoker, baseball player, professor, and poet for less than $50 a month. The school teacher, sometimes slightly older than her pupils, was a renaissance individual. When they arrived on their first day of school they may have only known how to speak a foreign language but they soon learned how to speak, read, spell, and write English. They got to school on foot, on horseback, or in a wagon.

The children who attended ranged in age from five to 21 and endured dust storms, prairie fires, and cattle drives swirling past the school house in order to get an eighth grade education. They were called names like Prairie Flower, Buzzard Roost, and Good Intent. For a hundred years, white frame or native stone one-room schoolhouses dotted the section corners across Kansas.
