48°F
weather icon Clear

Oaklane Preschool closes

Oaklane Preschool Academy has permanently closed, becoming another casualty of the global pandemic.

“As we have all observed, in recent weeks the coronavirus outbreak has brought uncertainty and challenges to our families and businesses throughout Southern Nevada and around the world.

“Acknowledging that reality, and with much sadness, I have made the difficult decision to close Oaklane Preschool Academy …,” wrote owner Carole Gordon in a letter to parents.

Gordon said the virus and new preschool being built next to Oaklane on Wyoming Street contributed to her decision, as did heartfelt conversations with her children and family.

“At my age, I can’t be near children” and risk getting sick, she said, adding that with her students already at home it was a “perfect” time to close the school that she opened in 1976 — Boulder’s City’s first preschool.

The closure was effective March 31.

Gordon said she will now have more time to spend with her five children and 13 grandchildren, traveling to Philadelphia and Maryland, where some of them reside.

She said she also will attend a family reunion in August in Cape May, New Jersey, and go on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land with her son, Monsignor Gregory Gordon.

“When I go away, I won’t have to worry about the school.”

Though the decision alleviated some of her worries, Gordon said she was deeply saddened by the decision, which brought tears to her eyes as she discussed it.

Gordon has taught three generations of family at Oaklane in the past 44 years.

“Working with the children has been fulfilling, exciting and rewarding,” she said. “I have seen them grow socially, emotionally, physically and academically.”

“As the very first student at Oaklane Academy, I am grateful for all that you accomplished over these last 44 years, and for the incredible education you provided to me and to generations of children and families growing up in Boulder City,” wrote her son Richard Gordon, a lawyer in Las Vegas. “Oaklane has been a living legacy in our community for almost half a century and, Mom, you have been its spirit and life from the beginning.”

“Oaklane has been such a vital part of three of my grandsons’ lives. The curriculum Mrs. Gordon has taught for multiple generations set my grandsons on a path to excellence. Words cannot begin to express my gratitude to Mrs. Gordon and her staff,” said Marisue Barnes. “My oldest grandson attended Oaklane 2003-2007. He is now in his second year of college and is a remarkable student. Thank you Carole!”

“Our boys had such a great time there. We loved their old-school approach, vintage toys and no-nonsense teachers,” said Crystal Randall. “Gonna miss these ladies!”

Randall said Oaklane was more than day care. “They were learning and doing things every day that helped mold them into confident and independent kids.”

Gordon said her affection for her students made going to work every day less like a job and more like a labor of love.

Before moving to Boulder City and opening Oaklane, Gordon taught “academically talented” first-graders in Philadelphia for five years.

She is a graduate of Temple University’s teachers college.

She said she is looking forward to the next chapter in her life and plans to continue learning something new every day. Additionally, she said she hopes to complete the children’s books and English/Spanish operettas she began writing decades ago.

“I will never forget what a blessing and privilege it has been to have touched the lives of so many children in these last 44 years.”

Hali Bernstein Saylor is editor of the Boulder City Review. She can be reached at hsaylor@bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9523. Follow @HalisComment on Twitter.

MOST READ
THE LATEST
Meet the ‘new’ judge

If that person overseeing hearings of the Boulder City Municipal Court looks familiar come Jan. 7, there is a good reason for that.

Garrett’s gardening gurus

There’s a good chance that waiting under the tree on Christmas morning for several Garrett Junior High students will be at-home hydroponic kits.

Council votes to approve $3M in spending

In their meeting of Dec. 10, the city council approved well over $3 million in spending in a single vote.

Rowland Lagan honored with city award

For the past quarter-century, Jill Rowland Lagan has gone above and beyond to help promote Boulder City and its businesses as CEO of the Boulder City Chamber of Commerce.

Christmas came early to Boulder City

This past weekend, thousands turned out for a vanity of holiday events in Boulder City including the Luminaria, lighting of the Christmas House and community tree, Doodlebug Bazaar and Santa’s Electric Light Parade.

State breaks ground on new railroad museum

A lot has changed about Boulder City since it was founded nearly a century ago but one thing has remained a constant: The lot on the northwest corner of Buchanan and Boulder City Parkway has always been vacant. But that is about to change as ground was broken on Friday for a long-awaited expansion of the Nevada State Railroad Museum that is slated to open on that corner in the summer of 2026.

Leafy Latitude gets their liquor license

It took more than a year, but the owners of the Leafy Latitude cigar bar on Nevada Way finally got their liquor license approved last week.

Residents grill BoR rep about xeriscape

Vernon Cunningham, deputy public affairs director for the Bureau of Reclamation Lower Colorado Basin Region, was at last week’s meeting of the Historic Preservation Commission to make a presentation about proposed signage at the site of the bureau’s headquarters at the top of Park Street.

The joy of giving on Christmas

Christmas is a day about giving to others, gathering with friends and family and enjoying a turkey or ham dinner with all the traditional sides.