Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC)

 - Class of 1922

Page 5 of 24

 

Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 5 of 24
Page 5 of 24



Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 4
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Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 6
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Page 5 text:

FARM SCHOOL FIGS PASTURE!) ON RAPE INTERIOR OF DAIRY’ DARN SPRAYING A TREE MR. AND MRS. H. L. JOSLYN THE LONS AND SHORT OF CLASS OF ’22

Page 4 text:

(ZACH WHITFORD) It is the aim of the writer to bring before the people of Craven County a few facts about the county that afe 1 kely to be forgotten. The reader will not be troubled with incidents of recent date but the article will deal with incidents that many people have neglected to learn. The main source of information has been reports made by Civil War veterans and those to whom traditional facts have been handed down. Carolina was once governed and owned by eight Lords Proprietors. In 1705 the tract of land known as Bath was divided into three precincts, the one called Archdale became Craven in 1712. Craven was named for Wil- liam, Lord Craven, one of the Lords Proprietors. A little after 170 5 pioneers from the town of Bath crossed the Pamlico river and cleared lands on the Neuse and the Trent rivers. They were joined in 1710 by a body of Swiss and Germans under a Swiss nobleman, Baron Christopher De Graffenried. The Indians called this place Chat- tawka their tr.be’s name. Til ' s Swiss bought this place from the Indians and to keep in mind the capital of the beautiful Swiss canton from which they came named it New Berne. The Indians moved to New York because they were driven away from Craven County by the strong Tuscarora tribe. They settled by a lake in New York and called it Lake Chattawka. Many educational enthusiasts went to this lake as a summer resort. Soon they started a movement or an organization which is today known as Chautau- qua, named for that lake and tribe of Ind ' ans. In 1776 the first school house established by the General Assembly of the province was located at New Bern. This school was begun in 1764 as the New Bern Academy. New Bern was the center of colonial life at that time. Two fairly good highways led there. Tryon, governor of North Carolina, spent about one hundred thousand dollars for a government building at New Bern. This house was called the Palace. It was the handsomest state-house in North or South America. The Palace was completed in 1770 and in 1798 the costly structure was accidentally burned and almost completely destroyed. For many years New Bern was the capital of the Province of North Car- olina and the largest town. It was made the county seat in 17 23 by the assembly which also passed a b 11 providing for the first court house there. In that same year that place was incorporated in North Carolina. In 1791, George Washington, then President of the United States, made a southern trip. In his chariot of state drawn by four horses and escorted by outriders he visited New Bern and passed through Vanceboro. Cheers, songs, speeches and banquets greeted him. The years passed until the final break came be tween the North and the South. The second battle in North Carolina was fought at Croatan, a place a few miles south of New Bern. The northerners plied their war boats up the Neuse river to capture the city of New Bern. They had a battle at Fort Thompson, nine miles from New Bern. The Confederate forces were forced to retreat. The body of men holding the fort was Company I, Tenth Regi- ment, Heavy Artillery, under the command of Captain John N. Whitford. The northerners next attacked New Bern. Z. B. Vance was in command of the Confederate forces at that battle. The town was taken on Friday, March 14, 1862, a fact which in all probability an ill-omened day for the people of Craven County. As New Bern was the capital, a national ceme- tery was started which has grown to be a very large one. This cemetery is still a national one. Captain Whitford became acquainted with Vance in the New Bern battle. Afterwards Vance gave him permission to go over the county and form a regiment. For his services he was promoted to the position of Colonel. Tuscarora, a small town near New Bern, was the home of the Tuscarora Indians, one of the fiercest tribes of Ind ' ans. That place was named for them, while Havelock was named for a famous Indian chief. There is a school in New Bern known as the Moses Griffin bu ' ld ng. Th s building is so-called because Moses Griffin, a Tory in the Revolut ' onary War, gave a fund to be used for educational purposes. His family disin- herited him because he was a Tory in the war. When he died he left all his wealth, which was very much, to the educational development of Craven County. The first printing press in North Carolina was set up in New Bern. Christ Episcopal Church in New Bern has in its possession a silver com- munion plate and a Bible presented by King George III. A few years ago Switzerland presented New Bern with the Swiss emblem, the iron bears. They may now be seen at the city hall. At Vanceboro stood a tree under which Washington stopped to eat his lunch while on his way to New Bern. The telephone company destroyed the tree about four years ago. Such scattering incidents as the above remind us of the historical import- ance of Craven County. The prestige of the past should keep alive the hearts of the citizens of the whole state to achieve higher rank among the states.



Page 6 text:

r. Brinson Janie Brown. Mr. S. M. Brinson was loved and honored by all. Especially do we of the Farm Life School honor him as the father and benefactor of our school. We feel that in the death of this loved and respected man our school has lost one of its kindest and most interested helpers. He stood by the school during its most critical years as loyally as during its most thriving ones. No man in Craven County had the welfare of the school more at heart than did he. Mr. Brinson was a man of character, a man upon whom one could depend and one who did not break faith with his fellow man. His virtues did not go unrewarded. When his people selected him to represent them in the government of the!r country they manifested their good faith in him and their appreciation of his services to them. Mr. Brinson was a man of sorrows although he did not show his sorrows to the world. Sorrows came fast during the last years of his life, never- theless he was not embittered by them. He remained buoyant in spite of his troubles and gave sympathy to those around him rather than asking it for himself. He never failed to heed the plea of one in need of help or of a kind word, always did he seek to l ' gliten the burdens of others. When he criticised it was favorable crit ' cism given from the standpoint of helping rather than discouraging. His motto through life seemed to be to look for the good in one’s fellow- man and to pass over the bad. If a man empties his purse into his head no man can take it from him. An investment in knowledge always pays the best interest. — Franklin. A PARADOX OF NATURE Nature works in circles, Everyone agrees; Trees grow out of doors — Doors are made from trees. — Meehan’s Monthly. The greatest event of the session was that of the high school group com- mencement held in Dover. Last year a silver lo ing cup ' was given to the high schools by the high school teachers. It was awarded to the school making the highest average in literary and athletic contests. As Farm School won the cup in 1921 there was much competition among schools to try to take it from her this year. By a close margin Farm Life School again won the cup. Already interest is being manifested in regard to next year’s contests. Paxton Dixon (State College) To get a true conception of what Farm Life School really is one should understand what the school means to its alumni. Thru clean athletics the school has built clean, strong bodies in its grad uates. Those bodies mean health and health means happiness. Farm Life School has developed Christian characters in its graduates. The atmosphere at the school has been of such a type that every graduate now in college is taking part in Y. W. or Y. M. C. A. or some other form of Christian work. A Y. M. C. A. secretary of one of the state colleges said of a Farm Life School graduate: “It seems that a boy with such a strong Christian char- acter is rather a God sent blessing to this college.’’ The boy in question gained the larger part of his Christian inspiration while he was being trained at Farm Life School. Farm Life School has built a foundation for its graduates upon which they may build worth-while future lives. All members of the Alumni of the school are interested in its welfare. They are behind it to help further its well begun work. We of the Alumni hope to see a greater institution, an institution that offers a bigger and broader education; an institution that will send out men and women who will be just the right type to lead Craven County, North Carolina and the United States to be the greatest country, state and nation in the world.

Suggestions in the Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC) collection:

Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC) online collection, 1924 Edition, Page 1

1924

Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC) online collection, 1927 Edition, Page 1

1927

Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC) online collection, 1942 Edition, Page 1

1942

Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC) online collection, 1953 Edition, Page 1

1953

Craven County Farm Life School - Mill Stream Yearbook (Vanceboro, NC) online collection, 1922 Edition, Page 11

1922, pg 11


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