Piedmont High School - Summit Yearbook (Lawndale, NC)

 - Class of 1912

Page 13 of 110

 

Piedmont High School - Summit Yearbook (Lawndale, NC) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 13 of 110
Page 13 of 110



Piedmont High School - Summit Yearbook (Lawndale, NC) online collection, 1912 Edition, Page 12
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Page 13 text:

Lawndale, North Carolina 7 old, more dormitory rooms, more recitation rooms, greater conveniences, water-works, a larger campus, larger play grounds and electric lights are the out¬ come of our terrible disaster. In all there are six buildings on our campus. The main building, Schenck Hall, contains four well lighted and well ventilated recitation rooms, a dining room, thirty-three by seventy, a kitchen with many conveniences, an of¬ fice and rooms for the Principal and his family. The whole of the upper story of this building is used as a dormitory for girls. The next is a stately build¬ ing containing the department of Music, the busi¬ ness school, the primary department and an audi¬ torium fitted with raised seats and modern stage scenery. Its seating capacity is about nine hundred. The Waters’ Library building was completed at the beginning of the last sesssion. This building, by the bequest of Miss Nancy Waters, was erected in memory of her brother, Capt. A. G. Waters, who was a brave Confederate soldier killed in the battle of Gains Mill, near Richmond, Va., June 27, 1862. The legacy was not sufficient for the building desired but the deficit was made up by Major H. F. Schenck and Mr. John F. Schenck. The building, thirty by thirty-six, two stories, built of pressed brick, the smallest but the finest of our buildings, adorns the crest of the hill. It is a fit monument for one who gave life for native land—more appropriate by far than glistering marble or lofty granite. On the evening of February the fifteenth, when the majority of the boys were attending church in Lawndale, fire broke out in Newton Hall, and in spite of the water-works and heroic efforts on the part of those present the building could not be saved as it was too far gone when discovered. There was some insurance and the hall will be exactly duplicated by the opening of the next session.

Page 12 text:

6 Piedmont High School fitted up for the primary department, other recita¬ tion rooms were enlarged and the dining-hall was remodeled. Yet, when the session opened and boys and girls began to arrive we found that we needed more room. The fact that it seems almost impos¬ sible to secure enough room for our students dem¬ onstrates clearly the wisdom of our plans and t he soundness of our policy; not, perhaps, from a financ¬ ial standpoint, but from the standpoint of doing the most good to the most people. A handsome build¬ ing, thirty by fifty, two stories high, was erected during the summer and it was ready for occupancy at the beginning of the session in 1909-1910. The lower story of this building is used as a boys ' dormi¬ tory. The upper story is used by the Musigmarho- nian and the Pierian Literary Societies. On the seventh of March, 1910, the main build¬ ing, containing recitation rooms, dining-room, audi¬ torium, Principal ' s office and residence, girls ' dormi¬ tory, and one dormitory for boys, was destroyed by fire. As only two dormitories for boys and the society halls remained, it was impossible to con¬ tinue our work, so the school was suspended for the remainder of the session. Major Schenck, the President of the Board of Truste es, called a meet¬ ing of the citizens and it was determined to re¬ build. The contract was let and work was begun at once. Sequestered student life gave place to the builder ' s work. Girls, boys, teachers, study and exam¬ inations had given way to the carpenter, the mason and the tinner. Soon the wooded hill was resonant with the craftsman ' s tool. Out of the ashes of the old was born a bigger and a better Piedmont. Out of the fire-fiend ' s ruin, out of cherished, broken plans have come the fruition of broader foundations and the realization of higher ideals. Three handsome structures, more modern in construction than the



Page 14 text:

8 Piedmont High School On May the seventeenth, 1911, the last day of commencement, after an inspiring address by Hon. T. W. Bickett, Major H. F. Schenck, President of the Board of Trustees, presented the needs of the School to the audience, and asked for five thousv and dollars to pay off the existing indebtedness, to paint the buildings and to install water-works. A wave of enthusiasm, such as is seldom seen when the people are asked for money, passed over the audience. Wealthy men, boys and girls working their way through school, women and children, all caught the spirit of the hour. More than six thous¬ and dollars was raised. The thanks of the school are due to the friends of the institution whose loyalty and liberality have made it possible for us to take another step forward in the march of progress. Piedmont is not dead. PIEDMONT IS NO LONG¬ ER IN ITS infancy. PIEDMONT IS NOTAN EXPERI¬ MENT. From small beginnings, through toil and sacrifice, it has ripened in efficiency till it is now generally recognized as one of the strongest prepara¬ tory schools in the State. It has seventeen years of steady growth behind it, a large patronage and many friends in the present, and glorious possibilities for the future. Our water cannot be surpassed. At a distance of about a quarter of a mile from the school build¬ ings is a fine, large spring of pure, sparkling water, affording more than twelve gallons per minute. This water is piped to us by means of an electric pump. A tank of fifteen thousand gallons capacity, stand¬ ing on a steel tower more than fifty feet high, gives us the best means of fighting fire. With this and with electric lights, with no danger of exploding lamps nor deadly fumes of gas in our dormitories, with build ¬ ings of only two stories in front, we feel that ve have less to fear from fire than ever before.

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Piedmont High School - Summit Yearbook (Lawndale, NC) online collection, 1910 Edition, Page 1

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Piedmont High School - Summit Yearbook (Lawndale, NC) online collection, 1911 Edition, Page 1

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Piedmont High School - Summit Yearbook (Lawndale, NC) online collection, 1913 Edition, Page 1

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Piedmont High School - Summit Yearbook (Lawndale, NC) online collection, 1914 Edition, Page 1

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Piedmont High School - Summit Yearbook (Lawndale, NC) online collection, 1916 Edition, Page 1

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