Tuesday, July 10, 2012

The Crossnore School

The Crossnore School is in North Carolina. 
Josh's grandma attended here in the beginning. She was raised in the foothills of Carolina and her daddy passed away two days after she was born. Thanks to this wonderful school her mother was able to send her, Grace Mace and her sister Juanita here. We were so excited to finally see it. We had heard so much about! Maggie was the most excited of all!
In 1913 doctors Eustace and Mary Martin Sloop started a school in the poverty drenched mountains of western North Carolina, holding strong to a simple and elegant belief:
“Education is the best way for a child to rise above his circumstances.”
The two doctors trudged on foot and rode horseback up steep dirt trails in isolated valleys to bring medicine to mountain families and convince farmers to let their children come to school. Because of poverty and distance, the school in Crossnore, inspired and directed by Mary Martin Sloop, eventually took in boarders, then built dormitories to accommodate them.
“The boarding-school idea came out of necessity.”— Dr. Mary Martin Sloop  
Over the decades, Crossnore gained a national reputation for effectiveness in changing lives history2and breaking patterns of poverty, moonshine and child marriages. Mary Martin Sloop spoke at Daughters of the American Revolution rallies and conferences across the nation, inspiring her audiences with tales of her life-changing mountain school. She eventually brought these stories to paper in her autobiography, Miracle in the Hills.
“Life at Crossnore was on the pioneering order.”
— Dr. Mary Martin Sloop,            
writing in her autobiography
 The Sloops built a school, hospital, dental clinic and eventually, a full-fledged boarding school to give children the basis for an improved life. They brought to Avery County the first electricity, the first telephone, the first paved road and the first residential school. Through the Sloops' advocacy, public schools flourished in Avery County. By then The Crossnore School facilities were filled with children who, through no fault of their own, could no longer live at home. Roads, growth and a common school community created a new horizon for families once cut off in narrow, isolated coves.
 (All of this is written and copyrighted here http://www.crossnoreschool.org)






1 comment:

Mychael-Ann said...

love the new blog layout - it may not be "new" but it's cute! And I LOVE that you took your kids to this school. I love that story and so neat that you took them to see the school!