Home > Carnegie Center > Arizona Women's Hall of Fame > Inductees > Orme, Minna Vrang
Minna Vrang Orme
1892 - 1970
Inducted in 1989

Used by permission from Sharlot Hall Museum
In 1929, Minna and Charles H. Orme founded the Orme School on their Quarter
Circle V Bar Ranch, twenty miles east of Mayer. What began as a
country school for the Orme children and those of ranch employees, eventually
became a private boarding school with a theatre, athletic fields and modern
classrooms. Minna Orme remained involved in the school from 1929
to her death in 1970.
Minna Vrang grew up in Ross, California and attended Stanford University
where she studied botany. In 1917, she married her college sweetheart
and fellow Stanford graduate, Charles Orme. The couple moved to the Charles’ family
ranch, the Orme Land and Cattle Company, 10 miles west of Phoenix. In
1929, Charles Orme suffered a severe case of sun stroke and the family
decided to move to a cooler climate. The new location was the Quarter
Circle V Bar Ranch, made up of nearly thirty thousand acres with excellent
grazing for cattle and the scenic Ash Creek. The ranch was in a remote
area of primitive roads and few neighbors. Minna and Charlie Orme
applied to the Yavapai County School Superintendent to establish a rural
school on the ranch. The superintendent approved of the plan and agreed
to give them $10 per student per month toward the salary of a resident
teacher.
Early in the fall of 1929, Minna and Charlie Orme drove to the neighboring
Dugas Ranch where a schoolhouse had been at the turn of the century. They
found old desks which had been nailed to railroad ties and brought them
back to Orme Ranch. They created a classroom in the old ranch house
which became the Orme Ranch School.
In the beginning, the school served only the children living on the ranch,
but before long friends and neighbors applied to the Ormes for their children
to be included. Often eastern families, whose children suffered from
asthma and needed the high dry climate of Arizona for relief, sought placement. Many
overcame their health problems quickly, but there were many occasions when
Minna sat up all night with a child suffering from an asthma attack.
During the Great Depression, operation of the Orme School brought in needed
funds so the ranch could survive the 1930s economic downfall. By
1945, the school had become a private boarding school exclusively.
Minna Orme did not teach in the classroom but acted as housemother for
all of the students and assigned everyone work around the ranch. She
also grasped any opportunity to teach the students about the world around
them, using her training in the natural sciences. She was an amateur
astronomer and taught children the constellations at night. Minna
also loved the literary arts and poetry readings.
In 1948, high school became part of the Orme School curriculum, and the
school became more formalized. Young Charlie Orme returned from his studies
at Stanford University and took the position of headmaster. Minna
Orme continued to work for the school as recruiter and by relentlessly
pursuing a quality education for the students.
Following her death in 1970, the school continued operating as a boarding
and college preparatory school. What began as a simple country school
eventually became a very successful college preparatory school attended
by students from all over the country.
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