tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5284597030233351185.post5498199611131591454..comments2024-02-04T19:01:49.455-06:00Comments on Itawamba Connections: Luke and Pearl... courting at Blue Mountain CollegeMona Robinson Millshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07942686174431804604noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5284597030233351185.post-64748882679259062852009-07-21T15:23:26.779-05:002009-07-21T15:23:26.779-05:00Where is/was Blue Mountian College located? My da...Where is/was Blue Mountian College located? My dad, the late Leon Stone of Bexar, pulled out of high school in the fall of 1918 (he had to register for the draft in late Aug. or early Sept. - 18th birthday was Aug. 29th) in order to help his dad gather all the crops before he was scheduled to leave around the 15th of Nov.; however, when Armistice Day was announced Nov. 11th, he didn't have to go and he had already missed about 1/2 of the fall semester so he took off for Dallas, TX where his Uncle John Clifford "Cliff" Robinson lived and worked for Sears Roebuck. He spent the next 3 or 4 years as a doorman/bellhop at the Adolphus Hotel. He decided to return and finish high school and graduated in the spring of 1924. The large group of students as photographed in front of the school in most likely the spring of 1924 shows a background that looks so similar to the bldg. and shrubs in this photo behind Luke and Pearl. Back in those days, the Hamilton High School was called the Agricultural and Mining school or included those words. Some interesting folks were associated with Hamilton High in that era. . . . A classmate was Alfred C. Walker who was the principal of Winfield High School at the time I went through my 6 years there. Mr. Walker always boasted how my dad was the smartest member of their class and it always made me want to do as well - how could I do otherwise? A young first year economis teacher at Hamilton was Miss Edith Egan - she was already teaching economics, U. S. History and World History - in Winfield when we moved there in 1944. She was still teaching when my sister finished in 1958! and I'm not sure how many more years after that. Her older sister was either the President or Dean at Mississipi State College for Women in Columbus during these corresponding years - does anyone know her? Both women were wonderful educators and disciplinarians. bettyeAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com