| History of Calhoun
Elementary
Calhoun Elementary School has a
history dating back to the turn of the century, to a time when
students rode to school on wagons drawn by teams of mules, and
were taught by teachers who were barely out of high school
themselves.
The school's history includes
construction projects that allowed the students to move into new
facilities and includes the closing of Calhoun High School,
whose students once shared the same building as the elementary
students.
Currently, the school's
enrollment stands at 434 students in grades K-8. Students are
taught by a staff that includes 27 teachers, 5 teacher's
assistants, and
Mr. Larson
Frerichs, principal. The school's
home on Sherwood Avenue is actually a combination of two
buildings, one built in 1959 for the high school, and the other
in 1971 for the elementary students. After the high school was
closed in 1979, the elementary school took over those classrooms
as well.
When Calhoun Elementary moved
into its current home in 1971, it marked the end of a 55-year
era in the town's history. From 1916 until 1971, students
attended a two-story building located on a hill overlooking what
is now the Hiwassee Meadowlands Park. Earlier, a frame building
served as the school's home.
Actually, education in Calhoun
began before the public school system was organized. A history
of McMinn County, compiled in 1984 by Memphis State Professor C.
Stephen Byrum, said the first school in the county was Hiwassee
Academy in Calhoun. The school. which opened around 1923, was
later known as Hiwassee Masonic Institute and had nearly 100
students enrolled as late as 1974. The school was held in the
old Masonic Lodge, which is still standing across the railroad
tracks on the west side of Main Street.
Although long-time residents of
Calhoun say classes were once held in a log house located in
front of First Baptist Church, records on file in the McMinn
County School Administrator's office begin with the county
acquiring a deed for "one acre more or less" in 1903. That
property was located on a tract of land that would later be the
site of the two-story brick building. A two-room frame house
served as the school until the McMinn County Board of Education
approved a construction project in 1916.
According to the agreement
signed by county school officials on May 22 of that year,
Cleveland Construction Company was authorized to build the new
school for
$7,250. The contractor was given until September 1 to complete
the project. Mrs. Fannie Maddox, who taught at Calhoun for 40
years, said residents of the community contributed money to help
pay for it.
Three rural schools (Hiwassee,
Center Point, and Britton) were consolidated with Calhoun when
the school year began. Later, Pine Knot was also consolidated
with the school in 1922. Even in its early years, the building
was not large enough to meet the needs of the students. Mrs.
Maddox said some classes continued to be held in the nearby
frame building. Later, two classrooms were added in the
basement, which also housed the cafeteria and boiler room.
For 43 years the building served
as the home of both the elementary school and high school. But
in 1959, a new high school was built on property the county
acquired on Sherwood Avenue. At the time it was built, newspaper
reports hailed it as one of the most attractive facilities in
East Tennessee.
For the next 12 years, Calhoun
Elementary students continued to attend classes in their old
building. But, by 1970, construction was under way on a new
elementary school located next to the high school. By building
the two schools next to each other, students would be allowed to
use the same cafeteria and gymnasium. The construction project was
completed in 1971, and the students and teachers moved into
their new building in the middle of the 1970-71 school year.
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