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| Fork Shoals School • 916 McKelvey Road • Pelzer, SC 29669 • (864)355-5000 • FAX: (864)355-5012 | Thursday, May 24, 2012 | ||
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History of Fork Shoals School |
| Acknowledgment |
The
history of Fork Shoals School dates back to the late 1800’s. At that
time a school existed on the grounds of Fork Shoals Baptist Church.
It was founded about 1877. The first building is believed to have
been a little one room log cabin located between the church and the
big rock.
About 1886 a building was erected on a site directly south of the present Masonic Lodge. This building had a large room downstairs and one upstairs (the Masons used this upper story). About 1904 an ell was added on, making one large room and one smaller room. About 1916 the school moved into a new building located on the site of the present Fork Shoals School. This building had two large classrooms downstairs and an auditorium upstairs. The school lunchroom in the section that was torn down in August of 1998 was the ground floor of the old school. In the meantime, citizens felt the need for a local high school; and in 1907 they organized the Fork Shoals High School. This operated as a private school. Men of the community put up money - bought stock - to finance the school, and tuition was set at $3.00 per month. A site was selected on a hill just east of the Reedy River and construction of the school building began. For most of the first year of operations (1907-08) classes were held in the Fork Shoals Mill Chapel. Later in the year, when the new building was completed, the student body moved across the river. The first graduating class was that of 1910 with 5 graduates. There was no graduating class in 1911 because the school was updated that year and students had to attend an extra year to graduate. During that time an 8 room building was erected on the grounds west of the school to house the professor and his family and the girl students who boarded Monday-Friday. This dormitory building is still standing today. In 1917, with World War I in progress, the school closed; and the era of the Fork Shoals Private High School came to an end. Some of the students returned to the Fork Shoals School (on the
present site). All grades were taught here - from first grade on up.
The school grew from 2 teachers (in 1916-17) to 4 teachers in
1919-20. The auditorium, with a curtain across the middle, was used
for 2 classrooms. Additional space was clearly needed. To
accommodate this growing enrollment a 5th grade teacher Work began on an addition to the school building (on the present site). About Thanksgiving of 1923 the new building was completed and the upper grades from across the river moved in. There were 10 classrooms and a large auditorium in the new building. The school operated in this building until the late ‘30’s. In 1938 the school borrowed $7,500 in addition to federal funds that had been obtained; and 3 buildings were erected. At a total cost of $40,000 it was one of the most modern rural school systems of that day. Consolidation of county schools began in 1951. The class of 1952 was the last to graduate from Fork Shoals High School. That fall the school became an elementary school. Concern for quality education continued and in 1970 the elementary school was accredited by the Southern Association and the State Department of Education. A fire destroyed the middle section of school, the auditorium, in 1991. Then in August 1998, a new facility was built just behind the location of the old school. The oldest section built in 1916 was torn down. One section still remains and has been renovated for use as a community center. The elementary school has operated for more than 100 years without interruption; and a high school existed for 40 years. Fork Shoals School has a great heritage, and the citizens of this community are deserving of the congratulations of all rural communities. To learn more about the history of Fork Shoals School, you may read A History of Fork Shoals School compiled by Peggy Sims Smith on this web site. |
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| Dedication | |||
| Chapter 1: Little School By the Church | |||
| Chapter 2: The Private High School | |||
| Chapter 3: The Freshet | |||
| Chapter 4: Homemade Entertainment | |||
| Chapter 5: The State High School | |||
| Chapter 6: Clinton P. Rice (Mr. Clint) | |||
| Chapter 7: The Depression Years | |||
| Chapter 8: The Final Years | |||
| Superintendents | |||
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