05/28/2026
MRTA-F is happy to announce we will be giving out $500 grants to 84 classroom teachers and 14 for support staff in 2026!
New for this year, we have consolidated both the PSRS and the Maggie Elder PEERS grant applications into one application. We also will only be accepting applications online this year.
Here’s the link to apply: https://mrta.org/index.php/foundation/apply-for-grants
All applications are due JUNE 30th!
04/26/2026
We had a busy week! Thursday evening we provided and served tacos to participants in Project RISE.
Friday evening we provided dessert for Missouri Disabled Sportsman dinner.
04/23/2026
So late!!
LCARSP had a great April meeting. Melissa Powers of the JAG (Jobs for American Graduates) program in Aurora School District brought 3 of her students to share the special training that JAG offers.
04/23/2026
Grab some MRTA/MRTA-F merch and make it count.
100% of every purchase's proceeds go directly to funding classroom grants for Missouri public schools. So when you wear it, you’re not just showing support, you’re helping make it happen.
It’s simple. Wear the message. Support the mission.
https://missouri-retired-teachers-association.myshopify.com/
04/17/2026
What a great time we had at our April meeting!
03/13/2026
Our March gathering was informative and fun. Socialization at the extreme. President Teena Fare shared health and safety tips for seniors that she had picked up from doctors tending to her mom and dad. Very useful!
03/13/2026
Good food, good people and good information! Another fantastic conference put on by MRTA staff. Lawrence County Retired School Personnel was well represented at MRTA Leadership Conference.
Sherry Rouner, Jill Garoutte, Ruby Vincent and Sunni Wilson.
02/16/2026
Yum! We had a chocolate candy making demonstration with samples from Mary Ann Gregory and Sherry Meyer at our February meeting!
01/29/2026
Some 2025 activities that I was slow to post.
11/12/2025
In the early 1900s, the Mississippi was not just a river — it was a lifeline. Along its banks lived families who worked the soil and the water but rarely held books. Schools were few, libraries rarer still. Then, in 1904, a handful of women decided that if knowledge couldn’t reach the people, they would carry it there themselves.
They became known as the Book Boat Women.
Eleanor Finch, a retired Iowa schoolteacher with more grit than savings, found an abandoned cargo barge and saw not decay, but possibility. With two friends — Clara Jenkins, a widowed printer’s wife, and young Ada Lou, a seamstress who loved poetry — she scraped together every dollar she could. They painted the old vessel white, filled it with secondhand books, and christened it The Knowledge Belle.
By midsummer, the Book Boat was gliding south with the current, stacked with novels, almanacs, hymnals, and children’s readers. Wherever it stopped, people gathered. Farmers traded eggs, apples, or cornmeal for borrowed books. Children ran along the banks shouting, “The library’s come!”
At night, the women read aloud by kerosene light as the fog rolled across the water. Some towns had never seen women traveling alone, let alone bringing an entire library. But soon, they were welcomed as friends — the river’s own teachers.
When the winter freeze came, the other boats moored for safety. Not Eleanor. She strapped a canvas sack of books to her back and walked miles along the frozen shore, delivering reading lessons to any child who waited by a fire. “The river sleeps,” she’d tell them, “but the stories never do.”
By the 1910s, similar floating libraries appeared across Minnesota, Illinois, and Missouri — inspired by the women who proved that education could move, that light could travel by water.
They were never rich, never famous, but they carried something far greater: a belief that words could change even the most forgotten places.
The Book Boat Women of the Mississippi — teachers, widows, dreamers — left no statues behind, only ripples of learning still widening through history.