Schools 1790's to 1920'sIndian Arrowheads file:///X:/HistoryRoom/10 - Schools, 1790s - 1920s Rev.htm
Schools, 1790s —1920s
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Cokesbury School
The first school of which there is a recorded account was the Cokesbury
School, founded in 1793, east of Advance. It was the first Methodist school in
North Carolina.
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Cokesbury School - Drawing
This is an artist's conception of the building based on an original written
description. No longer a school, it was being used for a church in 1799.
Foundation stones remain to mark the site.
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Peter Stuart Ney School Book
In 1823 a mysterious man, Peter Stuart Ney, came to Davie County to teach
school. This is his signature (top left) and his handwriting in an old school book.
He claimed to be Napoleon's famous general and Marshall of the French armies,
and there is evidence that he was. There is also evidence that he was an imposter,
a Scotsman. Much research by well-known scholars has failed to solve the
mystery.
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Mocksville Academy
Until free public schools were established by North Carolina law in 1839,
only private academies, charging tuition, were available, and only children, whose
parents were able to pay, went to school. The Mocksville Academy, chartered in
1826, still stands on Salisbury Street.
It is believed that Peter Stuart Ney taught at this academy. Several academies in
the county continued to function after free public schools were begun. Some
academy terms were as long as ten months.
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Hodges Business College
In the early 1890s J. D. Hodges built a school across from Concord
Methodist Church known as Hodges' Business College. Major emphasis was on
business courses for older boys. He conducted the school several years until about
1910. In 1895 the five-month term cost $45.00, including tuition, board, room,
and laundry. Pupils boarded at nearby homes. Completely restored, it is now a
private residence.
A school, Augusta Seminary, financed by local citizens for students' higher
education, functioned at the Concord Church site from 1888 to 1897. Bought by
the NC yearly Meetings of Friends (Quakers), it functioned as a combination
church and school from 1897 to about 1900.
*Read the interesting original descriptions and information about the several
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academies reprinted in the History of Davie County and note the contrast with
today's schools.
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}
1839 School Vote
Free tax -supported public schools began in Davie County in 1839. That
year Davie County citizens voted 364 to 73 - a five to one majority - in favor of
free tax -supported public schools.
Free public school terms were two to three months in mid -winter, when
children were not needed on the farm. Approximately one half of the eligible
white boys and girls, ages 6 to 21 years, attended school in 1860. State law
prohibited teaching slave children to read and write, though it was sometimes
done privately. Few schools functioned during the Civil War, but by 1870 schools
were open again, and there were schools for African-American students also.
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Cana School
The Cana School, built about 1895, was one of the larger and better public
schools. Note the roofed but open arbor at the rear used primarily for
commencement exercises. Commencement exercises at the end of the year were a
very important part of the school term and often lasted as long as three days.
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Sixty-two Schools in the County
When schoolhouses similar to this one were built about 1900, there were 62
schools in the county, most with one or two teachers. About one-half were still
log buildings. Of these 62 schools, 17 were for African-American children.
School terms for all children were three to four months. However, students
who could pay went to school additional months; this was known as "subscription
schooling."
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Cedar Creek School
This was Cedar Creek School near Farmington for African-American
children.
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School Parade
A parade by school children in the early 1900s.
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School Buses About 1925
Hard seats, no heaters, on rough dirt roads — but it was certainly better than
walking. In the early buses the seats were arranged lengthwise.
Often, to go to school, children had to walk several miles in all sorts of
weather. Creeks and small streams were crossed on partially flattened logs laid
over the water.
When roads were extremely muddy, overshoes were tied on with a string at
the heel.
Photo: Davie Country Heritage
School Dress — 1920s
Note the clothes worn by the students.
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Photo: Davie Country Heritage
file:///X:/HistoryRoom/IO - Schools, 1790s - 1920s Rev.htm
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Cooleemee Graded School
The school built by the Erwin Mills Co. at Cooleemee in 1903 was the first
graded school in the county. This means pupils were separated into grades. It was
the finest school building in the county at that time.
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Mocksville Graded School
The Mocksville School on Cherry Street, a "graded school," was built with
town bond money in 1911. It was the first brick public school building in the
county. This building with a temporary frame building accommodated grades one
through eleven until the mid -1920s when the Mocksville High School was built
on North Main Street. This building also housed the upper elementary grades.
With some added classrooms and a lunchroom, the school on Cherry Street
continued to be used for classes until the Mocksville Elementary School opened in
1971.
Today it houses the administrative offices for the Davie County Schools.
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In the very early 1900s several of the county school "districts" voted special
taxes for a six-month school term, but most of the county's schools were open
only four months. Statewide compulsory attendance began in 1908.
The early 1920s saw a surge of consolidation of small one- and two -teacher
schools into larger schools, grades one through eleven, with eight-month terms
and some with school bus transportation.
Advancements in education in North Carolina between 1939 and 1944
included rental and free textbooks, a nine-month school term, and the twelfth
grade.
The following 1920s -consolidated high schools (excepting Smith Grove
High School which had been merged with Farmington) continued until the Davie
County High School opened in 1956.
Your grandparents may have attended one of these schools.
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Farmington Elementary and High School
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Smith Grove Elementary and High School
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Cooleemee Elementary and High School
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Shady Grove Elementary and High School
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Mocksville Elementary and High School
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Davie County Training School
In 1926 the Davie County Training School for African-
American students was built to replace an old frame schoolhouse near the depot.
This rear entrance was part of the original building. This old structure, no longer
usable, was recently torn down.
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Central Davie Elementary and High School
Davie County Training School with two additional buildings was later
Central Davie Elementary and High School, then Mocksville Middle School, then
again Central Davie Elementary, and is now Central Davie. The facilities are now
used for offices, meetings, and special student programs.
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Farmington Gymnasium - 1930s
This frame gymnasium at the former Farmington School site and a similar
one at Mocksville were built about 1930 to replace the outdoor dirt basketball
courts and small make -shift courts on the stages of auditoriums.
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Farmington Gym Heating System
Four large coal -burning stoves comprised the gym heating system.
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