THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of
Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
Mrs. Dora
Hunter Allison Spiva Honored
Mention the name of “Mrs. Dora” and many in
This is a special “Happy
Valentine’s Day”
and “Happy Birthday” tribute all rolled into one for a noble teacher
who was a
major influence in my high school years and throughout my life.
A significant honor and well-deserved
recognition was announced publicly on
The event at
Pastor Dick Stillwell of
Her membership in and work at the
church span more than nine decades, for there she has been a teacher. She helped to found Woman’s Missionary Union
in 1929, and became a leader of this women’s organization in church,
Notla
River Association, and Georgia Baptist Woman’s Missionary Union as a
divisional
vice-president. She served as
Superintendent of the Sunday School in a time when women were not
usually elected
to major leadership positions in a local church.
From Truett McConnell College were
president Dr. Jerry W. Pounds, Sr. and his wife, Bayne;
Dr. Sam Cash, Vice-President for Advancement
Services; Dr. Susan Gannaway, Professor of Education who wrote the
proposal for
the four-year degree program approved by accrediting agencies; Dr.
DeWitt Cox
(and his wife Edna), special consultant for the campaign to raise funds
for the
Spiva School of Education; Ms. Edna Holcomb, now associate with Dr.
Cash in the
Office of Advancement as Dean of
Institutional
Support and long-time professor at the college; the Vice-President of
Academic
Studies; music professor Ms. Kathy Duren; students Rachel Bailey and
Michael
Bailey who sang; and student Brett Carson who rendered background piano
music
during the luncheon. Others from the
college were present for the luncheon, with food provided by the
ARAMark Food
Service which also manages the cafeteria on campus.
The Blairsville Garden Club of which
Mrs. Dora was a founding member made lovely arrangements not only for
the
speakers’ table but for each of the round tables where guests enjoyed a
delightful meal, good conversation, and the program that honored “Aunt Dora.”
Everywhere one looked were smiling faces, savoring the
atmosphere and
reveling in the association with one whom they loved and honored.
Representative Charles Jenkins
of the
Georgia Legislature, a student of “Aunt Dora,” Class of 1947, was
present to
present the Georgia House Resolution in her honor.
However, the framed bill did not arrived due
to the snow, because Representative Terry Johnson did not hazard
mountain roads
to be present.
There were light and serious
moments
interspersed as testimonies to Mrs. Dora’s influence came from County
School
Superintendent, Tommy Stephens. He said
he was never known for his acumen in Mrs. Dora’s math classes as a high
school
student and it took a stint in the military and Truett McConnell
College (he is
an alumnus) to set him on the right course, as well as remembering Mrs.
Dora’s
sound advice when he “liked sports better than studies” in high school. Mr. Stephens lauded the integrity of Union
County Schools, past and present, due to dedicated teachers. He is excited about the new
From her niece, Dr. Austine
Hunter Wallis,
an outstanding math educator, counselor, administrator and in “Who’s
Who Among
America”s Teachers” came funny stories about how the then
near-centenarian, her
real Aunt Dora and Austine’s Uncle Roscoe Collins could out-do her on
trips to
California and elsewhere. She said, in
tribute, “My Aunt Dora inspired me to become a teacher.”
From Dr. Paul Abernathy, former
student,
came accolades of how Mrs. Dora inspired him to buckle down, study,
seek higher
education. For twenty-seven years he was
on the science faculty of
Clyde Collins, retired educator
and
principal, gave a tongue-in-cheek report of how sometimes Mrs. Dora was
late to
first period Algebra class when he was her student, and he, therefore,
just got
“half a class of Algebra II.” But,
before Mrs. Dora retired, he was her principal at
In addition to Dr. Pounds, Dr.
Cash, Dr.
Gannaway, and Dr. Cox of the college, those on the Dora Spiva Campaign
Steering
Committee are Ethelene Dyer Jones (Union native now living in
Milledgeville, or
“yours truly”) Honorary Chair; and from Blairsville, Rev. Troy Acree,
Mr. Clyde
Collins, Mrs. Janet Hill, Representative Charles Jenkins, and Rev.
Charles
(Dick) Stillwell, and from Cleveland, GA, Rev. Doug Merck.
We have a large challenge before us: Raising
$1.1 million dollars to endow the
newly-formed Dora Hunter Alllison Spiva School of Education at
c2006 by
Ethelene Dyer
Jones; published Feb. 16, 2006 in The Union Sentinel, Blairsville,
GA.
Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
[Ethelene Dyer
Jones is a retired educator,
freelance writer, poet, and historian. She may be reached at
e-mail edj0513@windstream.net;
phone 478-453-8751; or mail 1708 Cedarwood Road, Milledgeville, GA
31061-2411.]
Updated June 26, 2018
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