For whatever reason, 1983 was the year—at least in Fort Meade, Florida—to
commemorate the Class of 1912.
At least twenty eight of the class members of 1912 were able
to attend the special event held in their honor on the evening of September 22,
1983. Along with them were official representatives of the school district,
duly listed on the front page of the event’s program.
Recognition Night
Student Body of 1912
Fort Meade Junior Senior
High School
September 22, 1983
School Superintendent: R. Clem ChurchwellSouthwest Area Superintendent: Billy D. BrownSchool Board Members:Claude Ridley, ChairmanNancy Simmons, Dist. 1Dan Hutchison, Dist. 2J. J. Corbett, Dist. 3Ted Aggelis, Dist. 5
These school officials were joined by representatives of the
community in welcoming those class members of 1912 still able to gather
together in the city that evening.
The only reason I know that is because of the long-standing
friendship and correspondence between two school chums—one who made it to the
event, and one who did not. Zemla Doke—now Zemla Griffith—had returned to her
childhood home in Fort Meade to attend this special event, and then to send
some mementos of the occasion in a letter to her longtime friend and former classmate, Rubie McClellan Davis.
“Back to School”
Night
Honoring Student Body
of 1912
Welcome………………………….Carl
Newsome
Student Council
President
Invocation………………………Rev.
Lawrence Sthreshley
First Presbyterian
Church
Remarks…………………..Dan
Moody
Former School
Board Member
Proclamation……………W.
J. Loadholtes
Mayor of Fort Meade
Introduction of
Students From Fort
Meade
School — 1912…………….Tom
McDonald
Principal
Presentations………………Clifton Mains
Deputy Superintendent
Closing Remarks………………Carl
Newsome
Benediction…………..Pernell
Cornelius
Youth Pastor
Peaceful Missionary Baptist Church
Open House and
Refreshments
“Home of The Fighting Miners”
It was interesting taking a look at the list of attendees
for the event. While not one of the names mean anything to me—other than as
classmates of my grandmother, Rubie Davis—it was fun reading through the list
and mentally constructing family constellations, wondering if Edith McAuley
Allen and Don McAuley were actually siblings, or just coincidentally carried
the same surname during their school years. Were Jeanette Rivers and Wiley Rivers
brother and sister? Were John Enzor and Julia Griffin Enzor childhood
sweethearts?
Honored Guests
Student Body of 1912
Lawrence
Adams
Edith McAuley Allen
Fred Bobbett
Clair Botts
Ralph Botts
Austin Clifton
Naomi Griffin Drane
John Enzor
Julia Griffin Enzor
Inez Prine Garrard
Zelma Doke Griffith
Marion Herring
Maude Lightsey Jones
Walter Lightsey
Lucille Wingate Long
Mary Wingate Martin
Don McAuley
Clem Moseley
Quessie Nobles Pierce
Jeanette Rivers
Wiley Rivers
Eva Rivers Sexton
Mrs. S. L. Nobles
Townsend
Annabelle Wiggins
Gordon Wilcox
Billy Williams
Warren Williams
John Wingate
I know lists like this can make for dull reading, other than
the mind games we construct for ourselves as we peek at ephemera from days gone
by. However, by typing in these lists and posting them online—as many in the blogging world who participate in amanuensis memes do—we dig into all the forgotten records of the past and add
to the plethora of digitized resources which, having been found, allow other
family history researchers to add yet another tiny sliver of life to the portraits of their own ancestors.
What's with the little tough guy cartoon? School mascot?
ReplyDeleteOh Well DUH and Double DUH -- I just reread the title.
DeleteYep, he's just one of The Fighting Miners.
DeleteMakes me wonder what there was in Fort Meade to be mined...
"Production at the South Fort Meade mine, which supplies 20 percent of North America's phosphate reserves and employs 200, should resume..."
DeleteI think Phosphate is "soap".
It is a wonderful bit of information for anyone searching...I know I would be thrilled to run across it:)
ReplyDeleteWe both would be thrilled to find more of this sort of stuff! I think that's why we try to pay it forward by sharing online what we've found that may be of use to others researching their own family histories. What we do for others, we hope others out there--that we've yet to find--are likewise doing the same thing for people like us :)
Delete