05/15/2026
There is something sacred about old places.
Perhaps that is why the Wooden Old Stone School Onsted Michigan, built in 1850, at the corner of Stephenson and Hawkins, in Onsted, MI, speaks to my heart.
For several years, I have had the joy of serving as a docent there, welcoming visitors through its doors and helping preserve the stories held within those weathered walls. Stories of children who once carried lunch pails across dusty roads, recited lessons at wooden desks, and rang the school bell long before technology ever entered a classroom. We also host local schoolchildren for field trips. As the bus stops over the hill, the students walk to this building, which holds so much history, and step back into a classroom to experience what learning was like a century ago.
But seasons change.
Due to health challenges, I have had to step back from some of my commitments this past year. And if I am honest, releasing things we love is not always easy. Yet I am learning something important in this season of life:
Not everything is ours to hold forever.
Some things are ours to nurture… and then share.
What a gift it has been to watch a new — and much younger — group of volunteers step forward with energy, creativity, and deep appreciation for this historical gem. They are breathing fresh life into the schoolhouse with monthly activities, community events, and continued preservation efforts that ensure these stories will not be lost. The Open Houses are the first Saturday of each month, June through October, with a Christmas event in December.
One of the projects especially close to my heart is the Oral History Project created in 2019, featuring interviews with former students and neighbors connected to this one-room schoolhouse. Listening to those voices reminds me that legacy is not simply about buildings or photographs.
Legacy is about stories.
Values.
Faithfulness.
The willingness to pass the torch so others may continue the work.
And perhaps that is true for all of us.
We plant seeds we may never fully see bloom.
We teach, encourage, love, mentor, write, parent, volunteer, pray, and serve — trusting God with the harvest that comes later.
The Wooden Old Stone Schoolhouse has stood for over 175 years because, generation after generation, people have chosen to care enough to preserve it.
What are we preserving for those who come after us?
I would love for you to stop by the first Open House of the season on Saturday, June 6, from 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
The featured discussion will focus on gardening preparation and planting, facilitated by June Elwell and Laura Pitock. It feels fitting somehow — talking about planting seeds in a place that has been cultivating minds and memories since 1850.
Some things are not ours to keep.
But they are absolutely ours to pass on.
And that may be one of the most beautiful forms of legacy of all.