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Page 66 text:
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A FINAL TRIBUTE TO OUR ORGANIZATIONS A person doesn’t get a grade for all the things they learn. Seldom does one get a grade for qualities such as, leadership, an ability to get along with others, or a true desire to serve others. The organizations, here at Hardin Reynolds, are for the purpose of a closer relationship with others and conversely for a variety of experiences, for achievement and the teeling of belonging. These clubs enable a student to develop himself by joining, sharing, and working for the best interests of all. 62
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Page 65 text:
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Walter Reynolds of Winston-Salem met this need by having erected a $60,000 building honoring the memory of their father, Hardin Williams Reynolds. The first floor of this building is occupied by the Vocational Agriculture Depart¬ ment; the second floor is an auditorium with a seating capacity of 600; the third floor was used for faculty apartments. When the building was dedicated in April 1927, the county school board announced that the school would henceforth be known as Hardin Reynolds Memorial School. In 1950, William N. Reynolds, a native of the Critz section and one of the founders of R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company in Winston-Salem, Noidi Carolina, agreed to donate $100,000 to the Critz community for use in the construction of a combination community building and school gymnasium. This still serves as the gymnasium for the school. Erected by Will and Walter Reynolds in honor of their father, Hardin Reynolds. Last addition - financed partly by County funds. Consolidation of the school started in 1925 with three buses bringing children from neighbor¬ ing communities. The building originally planned as a girls’ dormitory and no longer being needed as such, now houses the school lunchroom and kitchen , the home economics department, several classrooms, Mr. Terry’s office and the guidance department. The latest addition to the school, and the one building financed in part by county funds — was started in 1936 and completed in 1940. This building has four high school classrooms and the school library. In the basement is the community cannery which, operates under the supervision of the department of Vocational Agriculture, has been a great asset. The school was first accredited by the South¬ ern Association of Secondary Schools and Col¬ leges in the mid-thirties, being recognized as one of the outstanding rural high schools in the state. The enrollment of the school has grown from approximately seventy-five in 1914 to 677 at present; the teaching staff, from four to twenty- six. Yes, they really played like that! Mrs. Via?! 61
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