The idea began on a 
		Vietnamese gunboat sometime in 1966 or 67 when a Kansas boy named John 
		Kirtland had a lot of time to think about home. One of the things he 
		kept going back to was the one room schoolhouse built in the middle of 
		the Kansas plains in 1895 that he had attended until it was closed after 
		his 7th grade year. He remembered carving his initials into that old red 
		brick, and he was sad that the old structure was being left to decay. 
		Through many years, a successful law practice in Washington, D.C., and a 
		wonderful family, the idea never died. Well with financial success comes 
		the ability to splurge, and John purchased a ticket back in time by 
		deciding to renovate the old schoolhouse. He contacted Bill Medina, who 
		had renovated a turn of the century stone home for John’s parents just 
		1/16th of a mile from the old school and the project was underway. John 
		was very particular in his instructions to maintain the details and 
		memories of the old schoolhouse, including the brick with the initials 
		he had carved over 50 years ago. Windows, chalkboards, the wash stand, 
		the wood floors…even the coat hooks had to be either salvaged or 
		replaced with a match to the original materials. The crowning glory was 
		replacing the bell in the bell tower. The original had been stolen, but 
		John came across a new one at an auction. Before his death, John’s 
		father (who was 90 years old and not permitted to drive) would ride his 
		lawnmower the 1/16th mile to see how the project was progressing. Before 
		it could be completed, John’s father passed away, but his mother was 
		able to see the finished project. John will retire in a few years, and 
		plans to return to his home and to use the old schoolhouse as a writing 
		studio…as he says "That’s where I learned to read and write in the first 
		place."