School records show that several residents have served term after term
on the
schoolboard. The first trea~surer, Robert Luedtke, served on the Board for
25 years,
while Henry Engel served as clerk for 17 years. Another resident who served
20 years
on the local board was William Schmidt.
    Because of its recent origin, the list of teachers teaching in Rockland
No. 10 is
complete. Mary Etzler, the first teacher, received a salary of $20 per monthf
for an
eight month term. Other teachers were Sadie Brennan 1896, Mary Etzler 1897-98,
Chas. Etzler, Lizzie Halloran, Clara Knutson, Mabel Jacobsen, Mary Gass,
and C.
Habighorst. The above named teachers taught this school prior to 1906. A
later teach-
er, Elizabeth Marquardt, became a county supervising teacher.
    The Long Lake district was settled by German emmigrants. Some of the
early
settlers whose names are still common to the community were the Luedtkes,
Wenzels,
Kanters, Kinasts, Behnkes, Kruegers, Burichs, Kreplines, Engels, and Schmidts.
All
of them were farmers and have left descendants who became well-known in this
and
other communities. One business, place of years back was a sawmill operated
in
partnership by Albert and Carl Behnke. Today, the prosperous community is
trav-
ersed by school buses which transport high school pupils to Brillion. The
little one-
room school built 52 years ago, no doubt, will soon be modernized or suspend
opera-
tion as did its parent district No. 6 Rockland a few years ago.


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