Viewing entries tagged "yearbooks"

Various Alamance County Materials including a Copy of The Credit Guide Now Available on DigitalNC

Thanks to our partner, Alamance County Public Libraries, batches containing various materials such as the 1938 Eli Whitney High School yearbook, Walter M. Crabtree daybook, and a 1922-1924 copy of The Credit Guide are now available on our website here and here.

The Credit Guide was originally a resource used by loaners to check if an individual was trustworthy enough to pay them back. Essentially, the guide functioned as a physical credit history checker, but instead of having credit score numbers individuals received labels such as prompt pay, fair pay, slow pay, and considered honest but unfortunate circumstances prevented paying me. Today, the guide is a gold mine for those looking for information on people in cities located in or near Alamance County. The Credit Guide not only includes an indication of how likely someone is to pay back their loan, but also an individual’s name, occupation, and address.

To learn more about Alamance County Public Libraries, please visit their website.

To view more materials from the Alamance County Public Libraries, please click here.


Chadbourn High School Materials Now on DigitalNC

A batch containing various materials related to Chadbourn High School’s Class of 1952 are now available on our website. The batch includes Chadbourn High School’s 1952 yearbook, the May 19, 1952 issue of The Purple and Gold student newspaper, a program for the 1952 commencement exercises, and photographs from two of the Class of 1952’s reunions.

For more yearbooks from across North Carolina, visit our yearbook collection here.

To view more newspapers from around North Carolina, please visit our North Carolina Newspapers Collection here.

For more images from across North Carolina, visit our Images of North Carolina collection here.  


New Yearbooks from Rowan County High Schools Now on DigitalNC

Thanks to our partner, Rowan Public Library, a batch containing new Rowan County high school yearbooks spanning from 1937 to 1961 are now available on our website. This batch adds three new schools to our Rowan County high school yearbooks list—Landis High School, Rockwell High School, and Granite Quarry High School. 

Landis High School
1937, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1943, 1944, 1945, 1946, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1951, 1952, 1953, 1955, 1957, 1959, and 1961

Rockwell High School
1942, 1943, 1944, 1951, 1952, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, and 1959

Granite Quarry High School
1943, 1944, 1945, 1947, 1948, 1949, 1950, 1955, 1956, and 1957

To learn more about the Rowan Public Library, please visit their website.

For more yearbooks from across North Carolina, visit our yearbook collection.



300th Partner and Mount Pleasant Collegiate Institute Yearbooks

In addition to achieving the North Carolina Digital Heritage Center (NCDHC)’s goal of having at least one partner in each of the state’s 100 counties, the center has reached another milestone this year. The center’s newest partnership with the Eastern Cabarrus Historical Society brings the total numbers of DigitalNC contributors to 300!

Thanks to the Eastern Cabarrus Historical Society, a batch of Mount Pleasant Collegiate Institute yearbooks from 1925, 1928, 1932, and 1933 are now available on our website.

The Western Carolina Male Academy, later the site of Mount Pleasant Collegiate Institute, was founded in 1852. The main building of the school was completed in 1855 and the first class was enrolled the same year. The college was renamed three years after its opening in 1858 to the North Carolina College. Before the American Civil War, there were an average of 60+ students per class. These students would pay $125-145 a year in tuition and would travel from as far as Texas. When the war began in 1861, professors as well as students left the institute to fight. With the sharp decline in student enrollment, the college quickly began to have financial issues. After the war the college never recovered its same attendance levels or funding. In 1901, the North Carolina College closed its doors.

Group photograph of students of the Gerhardt Literary Society holding a pennant with "Gerhardt" on it.

Gerhardt Literary Society, 1928.

Two years later, in 1903, the Mount Pleasant Collegiate Institute opened on North Carolina College’s former campus thanks to generous alumni and Reverend L. E. Busby. A preparatory school for young men, the students studied English, literature, math, biology, and Latin. In 1907, military drills, uniform, and discipline were added to the school’s curriculum. Similar to the North Carolina College, the Mount Pleasant Collegiate Institute was closed in the early 1930s due to a lack of funding and an inability to compete with schools such as Lenoir College who received generous funding from the merged North Carolina and Tennessee Lutheran Synods.

In 1859, a Lutheran school for young women referred to as the Mount Pleasant Female Seminary was established in Mount Pleasant, North Carolina. Nine years after its establishment, the seminary was transferred to the North Carolina Synod in 1868 and was renamed to Mont Amoena Seminary in 1892. Mont Amoena was successful for many years, but ultimately was closed in 1927 due to its inability to keep up with the newer facilities of other colleges and public high school’s duplicating their curriculum. By copying the seminary’s curriculum, public high schools made it so that female students did not have to relocate to Mount Pleasant or pay the higher tuition cost of attending Mont Amoena. As a result of the seminary’s closing, female students were allowed on Mount Pleasant Collegiate Institute’s campus as day students in 1927. Evidence of this can be seen in the 1928, 1932, and 1933 yearbooks where headshots are featured of each class member.

To learn more about the Eastern Cabarrus Historical Society, please visit their website.

To view more North Carolina yearbooks, please visit our North Carolina Yearbooks Collection.

To browse all 300 institutions that have worked with us, please visit our contributor page.

Information from this post was pulled from the yearbooks as well as the NCpedia Lutheran Schools of Mount Pleasant entry.


Middleburg, Polkton, and Jefferson High School Yearbooks Now Available on DigitalNC

Thanks to our partner, Granville County Public Library, five yearbook issues from 1957 to 1962 are now available on our website. This batch adds Polkton High School to our list of schools with available yearbooks and expands on our holdings of Middleburg and Jefferson High School. Featured in the yearbooks is a look into education in the northern part of the state including the various clubs and sports offered at each school and photographs of fun school events.

Bus drivers for Middleburg High School sitting on a bus. One person is in the driver's seat while the rest are in the bench seats, all smiling at the camera from the window. Included are the bus driver's names: Hunter Reavis, Tommy Hendricks, Johnny Watkins, Jimmy Holloway, and Eddie Royster.

1961 Middleburg High School Bus Drivers

To learn more about Granville County Public Library, please visit their website.

For more yearbooks from across North Carolina, visit our yearbook collection.


New Materials from Lincoln County Historical Association are now on Digital NC

LincolnCountyHA

Images from the 1957 “The Rosphian” of Rock Springs High School in Rock Springs, NC. The top image is of the High School Band. The bottom image is the organization called “Piano Pupils”

From yearbooks to scrapbooks, Digitial NC is happy to announce new items coming from new partner, the Lincoln County Historical Association. Yearbooks range from 1949 to 1971 and cover two of the local high schools, Rock Springs High and Lincolnton High. Along with the numerous amount of yearbooks, Digitial NC has also made available “The Realistic Picture”,  a scrapbook that includes class pictures of the Rock Springs Elementary School in 1963.

Special thanks to our partner the Lincoln County Historical Association. To view more from their collection, visit them here.

To view more from our North Carolina High School Yearbooks, visit us here.

 


New Partner Wake Forest Historical Museum and DuBois School Materials Now Available on DigitalNC

Thanks to our newest partner, Wake Forest Historical Museum, an array of materials related to the DuBois School including yearbooks, student newspaper issues, posters, and a binder of DuBois School memories compiled by Myrlin Skinner are now available here and here.

The DuBois School was one of several African American schools in built in North Carolina that was funded by Julius Rosenwald. The school, which was later renamed to Wake Forest-Rolesville Middle School in the 1960s, is one of only five Rosenwald schools that are still visible today. The binder of materials compiled by Skinner is a wonderful resource for researching the DuBois school. It provides an in-depth look at the history of the school from materials such as letters from alumni, faculty names, photographs, yearbook scans, and newspaper clippings.

We are pleased to introduce our newest partner the Wake Forest Historical Museum. The museum is located in the Calvin Jones House in Wake Forest, North Carolina. They feature variety of exhibits on life in the Town of Wake Forest and surrounding areas as well as the history of Wake Forest College. The museum’s collections and exhibits are continuously expanding and changing with the donation of artifacts from community members and organizations.

To learn more about the Wake Forest Historical Museum, please visit their website.

To view more materials from North Carolina’s African American high schools, please view our North Carolina African American High Schools Collection.


New Yearbooks from Orange County on Digital NC

Digital NC now has 15 new yearbooks available thanks to our partner Orange County Public Library.  The yearbooks highlight the only Black high school for Black students in Orange County. Founded in 1938 as Hillsboro High School, the school was built in the 1930s. Later in 1943, the school changed its name to Central High School. The last class to graduate from Central High was in 1968 due to the integration of schools in Orange County.

CentralHigh1962

The Guidance Club and Student Council at Central High School in 1962.

CentralHigh1962

Girls’ and Boys’ Basketball teams in 1962 at Central High School.

Yearbooks include images from the students’ life such as the Guidance Club and Student Council. Most interesting are the images of the girls’ and boys’ basketball teams. Due to the school not having a gym, the teams would have to play at different locations.

Yearbooks from the white school at the time, Hillsborough High School, are also included in this batch. 

To view more from our partner, Orange County Public Library, visit them here.

To view our NC yearbook collection, visit here.

To view our NC African American High Schools collection, visit here.


New Yearbooks from Alamance County Now Available!

High School Yearbook

The front cover of the Doe – Wah – Jack yearbook for Walter M. Williams High School in 1971.

Thanks to our partner, Alamance County Public Library, 16 high school yearbooks are now available on Digital NC. Along with the yearbooks, the Burlington Telephone directory is also available. Each yearbook comes from several different high schools in Alamance County during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Yearbook titles include the Doe – Wah – Jack (1971) from Walter M. Williams High School in Burlington and the Aries (1970) from Northeast Guilford High School in McLeansville. These yearbooks join previous years such as the Sylvanian (1960) from Sylvan High School in Snow Camp and the Reg-O-Ala (1959) from E.M. Holt High School in Burlington.

To view our collection of high school and college yearbooks from North Carolina, visit our collection here.

Aries -- School Yearbook

The front cover of Northeast Guilford High School yearbook, Aries in 1970.


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