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	<title>HUU Community Cafe &#187; Reflections</title>
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		<title>Dale Enterprise School</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 24 Jul 2009 16:57:22 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Reflections]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Sermons & Talks]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: justify;">Dale Enterprise School
A talk presented to the Harrisonburg Unitarian-Universalist  Church
on the Occasion of the 100th Anniversary of the Schoolhouse.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Dale MacAllister
July 19, 2009</p>
<p>Fifty-seven years ago last month, another centennial celebration was held in this very building. In June 1952 a large celebration was organized to mark 100 years since Walnut Grove [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: justify;"><strong>Dale Enterprise School<br />
</strong>A talk presented to the Harrisonburg Unitarian-Universalist  Church<br />
on the Occasion of the 100<sup>th</sup> Anniversary of the Schoolhouse.</p>
<p style="text-align: justify;">Dale MacAllister<br />
July 19, 2009</p>
<p>Fifty-seven years ago last month, another centennial celebration was held in this very building. In June 1952 a large celebration was organized to mark 100 years since Walnut Grove School opened down the hill from here, just on the other side of  Cooks Creek. The event was organized to celebrate all the schools that had served children in the Dale Enterprise community.  Former teacher Annie L. Heatwole gave an address about the history of education in the community. She was a daughter of Lewis J. Heatwole, who also taught for a number of years in these schools. Miss Heatwole also mentioned that the earliest schools were often held in “unused shops and other private buildings.” She added that the teachers were usually men who were known as “schoolmasters.”Because teaching was considered a “soft job,” teachers were often those who were not physically fit for hard manual labor.</p>
<p>Let’s take a brief look at the three schools operated closest to this community: Walnut Grove, Pine Grove, and finally this Dale Enterprise building.  The name Dale Enterprise, by the way, was chosen for the post office name of the village in 1872. The previous name had been Millersville, named for the Miller family that ran an early store here. After the Civil War, Mr. J. W. Minnick started a new mercantile “enterprise” at the crossroads of Silver Lake Road and Route 33. Minnick’s store was located near a “dale,” so the chosen name became Dale Enterprise.</p>
<h3>Walnut Grove</h3>
<p>Walnut Grove was a log schoolhouse located in a grove of walnut trees at Dale Enterprise in the 1850s. It was opened about 1852 as a neighborhood school 18 years before public education became a reality in Virginia.  Since it opened before public education had begun it operated during the time that most local schools were part of Virginia’s “Common School” system. This system was designed to allow poor children to get a basic education paid for by money from the State Literary Fund. Walnut Grove Schoolhouse was located just east of Cooks Creek along the old roadbed of the Harrisonburg &amp; Rawley Springs Turnpike. The school lasted only about seven years. When it closed, the building was sold to Albert Fishback in 1859 or 1860. Fishback, the village blacksmith, used it for his dwelling. A report about the log building, written by Jim Duncan in 1979, told that the old structure was later used as a repair shop and garage and even as the community post office for a short time. The building eventually formed the nucleus of the Raymond Burkholder house here at Dale Enterprise.</p>
<h3>Pine Grove School<strong> </strong></h3>
<p>Pine Grove School, sometimes called Piney Grove, was located here at this location. In 1877, Peter S. and Nancy Reiff Heatwole deeded 80 square poles of land for the Pine Grove School along the “Harrisonburg and Rawley Springs Turnpike” to the Central District School Board. Abraham Swartz, who was also a trustee of the school, built the schoolhouse.</p>
<p>The school was called Pine Grove because of the many yellow pine trees surrounding it. The schoolhouse was constructed from the salvaged lumber of the earlier Fairview School, which was located where Belmont is now. Foundation stones from the old Weaver’s Schoolhouse were also used in the construction of Pine Grove.</p>
<p>Pine Grove  School was intended for those children in the community who lived west of Cooks Creek, while those east of the creek were assigned to Weaver’s School. By the 1908–09 school year, the year it closed, Pine Grove was very crowded with 42 pupils in its single room, but amazingly two teachers, Lewis J. Heatwole, mentioned earlier,  and his daughter Elizabeth (Lizzie M. Heatwole), were both teaching in the building. In a report that year, Mr. Heatwole described the building as “an old, weather-beaten school house, with rattling windows, leaking roof and old-fashioned furniture.”</p>
<p>Patrons of the school were already well aware of the need for a new schoolhouse. During Pine Grove’s February 1908 Patrons’ Day gathering, plans were made to meet later in the month to discuss securing a new schoolhouse. Interested citizens from the Dale Enterprise community, who attended the meeting, decided that a larger, three-room graded school was needed and that it should be built on the same site as Pine Grove. George F. Senger, L. F. Ritchie, and E. W. Burkholder were appointed to help raise money for the new schoolhouse. Patrons at the meeting immediately pledged more than $400 toward the building. <span id="more-225"></span></p>
<h3>Dale Enterprise School<strong> </strong></h3>
<p>In March 1909 Pine Grove patrons met with the Central District School Board to ask for the construction of a new schoolhouse on the same site. Later that year Pine Grove was replaced by the new, brick Dale Enterprise School. For some years traces of Pine Grove’s foundation remained visible a little closer the road and slightly west of the new schoolhouse.</p>
<p>Thus the building we are assembled in today was built in 1909 to replace the Pine Grove Schoolhouse. It cost $2,400. Students for the new school came from Weavers School, beside Weavers Church; with some students from Noble Center  School, on the southern foot of Mole Hill; the school at Hinton; and the school at Coakleytown, to the west of Mole Hill.</p>
<h3>Mole Hill</h3>
<p>Since I have been mentioning Mole Hill, let’s think contrary to the norm and make the proverbial mountain out of a mole hill. One could not easily overlook the fact that this former schoolhouse, and the earlier Pine  Grove School, were built in the shadow of Mole Hill. I believe the hill was named for the Mole family that lived in the area before the American Revolution. Here is a related riddle: how is the Dale Enterprise Schoolhouse like the ancient city of Pompeii? The answer is that they both sat at the base of a volcano. But luckily for Dale Enterprise residents, a volcano did not destroy this building or the community. Does everyone present today realize that Mole Hill represents the remnant of an extinct volcano? What we now witness behind us is the eroded remnant of what was an active volcano about 47 million years ago. This age, as volcanoes go in the east, is very young, making it one of the younger volcanoes on the East Coast. There is a similar extinct volcano in Highland County.</p>
<p>But back to the schoolhouse—</p>
<p>As I mentioned, the new Dale Enterprise School was located on the same property as the Pine Grove School that had been deeded to the Central District School Board by the Heatwoles in 1877. Lumber recycled from the dismantled Pine  Grove School was used in building the new schoolhouse, with plans and other materials provided by P. S. Suter of Mt.  Clinton. Will Rhodes, with help from John Corbin and Ike Cole, built the schoolhouse.</p>
<p>By November 1909, after the new school was already in operation, it had yet to be officially named, and the county and locals were informally calling it “Pine Grove,” a carryover name from the old schoolhouse. Several suggested names for the new building were “<strong>Mole Hill</strong> <strong>Academy</strong>,” “<strong>Grand Heights Institute</strong>,” and “<strong>The Outlook School</strong>,” but it was finally thought that the name for the new schoolhouse should be the same as the community in which it was built.</p>
<p>The building had been built with a belfry, and the community agreed to purchase the bell for it. They bought a 400-pound bronze bell and wheel cast by the C. S. Bell Company of Hillsboro, Ohio. It was ordered from Sears, Roebuck &amp; Company and shipped by train to Harrisonburg. The large bell made the final leg of its journey from the railroad station to the schoolhouse on a horse-drawn spring wagon. It has been said the bell was rung all the way from the station to the schoolhouse. The 1914 <em>History of Rockingham</em> <em>County Schools</em> described Dale Enterprise as “a beautiful three-room brick house with water supplied from the Harrisonburg mains.”</p>
<p>Sometimes it helps one put things into better perspective to know what else was going on at the same time as the construction and opening of this schoolhouse. Most of the more important educational happenings were taking place in Harrisonburg in 1909. At that time Harrisonburg schools were still a part of Rockingham County Schools. Harrisonburg Schools began kindergarten classes that summer, one of the earliest kindergarten programs in Virginia, and the progressive city has continued the program to the present. Out in the county new schoolhouses were built at Swift Run, at the foot of the mountain beyond Elkton, and at Tunis Creek, down Runions Creek north of Cootes Store. The most important educational news for the area may have been the opening of the new college officially named the “State Normal and Industrial School for Women at Harrisonburg” which has gone on to become James Madison University, one of the best universities in the Southeast.</p>
<p>We can be justly proud of the 100 years of service this building has offered for Dale Enterprise and for the extended community at large. It has been a public school, an alternative school, a private school, a Society of Friends meeting, a Lutheran church, and a Unitarian-Universalist church. Could the community leaders in 1909 have ever imagined all the important events this building would have witnessed during its first century of service?</p>
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		<title>Fourth of July</title>
		<link>http://huuweb.org/community-cafe/fourth-of-july/</link>
		<comments>http://huuweb.org/community-cafe/fourth-of-july/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 04 Jul 2008 20:28:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>jim</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Reflections]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://huuweb.org/community-cafe/?p=51</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>I remember well the Fourths when I was 10 to 12 years old in Pittsburgh, where I spent the summers with my father, my grandmother, and my father&#8217;s sisters. My father and I would arise early and after breakfast walk probably half a mile to Grandview avenue, that fabulous street that runs along the top [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I remember well the Fourths when I was 10 to 12 years old in Pittsburgh, where I spent the summers with my father, my grandmother, and my father&#8217;s sisters. My father and I would arise early and after breakfast walk probably half a mile to Grandview avenue, that fabulous street that runs along the top of Mt. Washington and looks down on the panorama of downtown Pittsburgh, the Monongahela river below, the Allegheny river beyond the downtown, and the beginning of the Ohio river off to the left. We would take the Mt. Washington incline down to Carson street and catch a street car to Forbes field, home park of the Pittsburgh Pirates baseball team. We would watch the morning game of the holiday doubleheader</p>
<p>It was such a great pleasure for me to be going someplace with my father. The first time we went, he taught me how to keep track of the game on a little card, recording the hits, walks, etc. for each inning. It seems the Pirates always played Cincinnati and they always lost, even though these were glory days when the Pirates won two National League pennants. The big stars were Paul Waner and his younger brother, Lloyd, known as &#8220;big poison&#8221; and &#8220;little poison.&#8221; My father always took those losses in his wonderful relaxed, resigned way. It was only a game.</p>
<p>After the game we went home to a special, delicious dinner that my grandmother had fixed. And I was happy. JJG</p>
<p> </p>
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		<title>Dog Days and Reflections</title>
		<link>http://huuweb.org/community-cafe/ginnys-dog-dharma/</link>
		<comments>http://huuweb.org/community-cafe/ginnys-dog-dharma/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Aug 2007 19:14:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ginny</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Reflections]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://huuweb.org/community-cafe/ginnys-dog-dharma/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Annie&#8217; s Run&#8230;that is what I call this little creek that runs  next to my house and where this odd mix of a terrier played among the dragon  flies and imaginary playmates at the water&#8217;s edge.  I had this wonderful friend  for almost 20 years. In the winter of 1999, while [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Annie&#8217; s Run</strong>&#8230;that is what I call this little creek that runs  next to my house and where this odd mix of a terrier played among the dragon  flies and imaginary playmates at the water&#8217;s edge.  I had this wonderful friend  for almost 20 years. In the winter of 1999, while vacationing in a warmer  climate to escape the mountain cold, I received a call from my house mate  telling me that Annie had wandered off a few days earlier and that she and the  neighbors had been unable to locate her. She probably had walked along the  forest path that lead into the National Forest and being almost blind and deaf,  she had lost her way. Annie was never found and for weeks, I had reoccurring  dreams where she would be coming toward me but would disappear into a dense fog.  Then one night, I dreamed of her. However, this time she was in a park somewhere  in Brooklyn, NY (I have never even been to Brooklyn) playing in a green grassy  area with a small boy. They ran, tumbled and ran some more. Annie was so happy !  And,I was at peace. I am blessed that I did not have to wait long for her to  return to bring again so much love. <span id="more-18"></span></p>
<p>This I do know. Dogs are the physical presence of the  bodhisattva. Through their teaching of the bodhicitta they remind each of us to  touch our tender heart and to give to all beings the same unconditional love and  compassion these beloved canines so willingly do. I have had many teachers of  the dharma but the most compassionate and most learned teachers are these dogs  who remind me daily of the Four Noble Truths. Today, I have Morgan my  bodhisattva German Shepherd who is now 13 years and is beginning to fail in body  but is as perfect as a &#8216;nobody dog&#8217; can be.  Below are just a few of the lessons  my dharma dogs have taught me.</p>
<h3>GINNY&#8217;S DOG DHARMA</h3>
<ul>
<li>From Annie I learned of old age, sickness, death and rebirth</li>
<li>From Morgan I am reminded again of old age and sickness</li>
<li>From Annie I learned happiness, giving, joyful living</li>
<li>From Morgan I have learned devotion, mindfulness, clear thinking</li>
<li>From Annie I learned to be open to all things</li>
<li>From Morgan I have learned wisdom and patience</li>
<li>From Annie I learned that I am unique just like everyone else</li>
<li>From Morgan I learned that if you eat bad food or too much food you will puke</li>
<li>From Morgan I learned that nobody is perfect and that it is okay to be nobody &#8230; even if you are a dog</li>
<li>From Annie I learned yoga</li>
<li>And from both Annie and Morgan I have learned to love and be loved</li>
</ul>
<p>A very good website for the person who may be interested in Buddhism without all the mystery.</p>
<p><a href="http://buddhism.kalachakranet.org/" title="A View on Buddhism.">http://buddhism.kalachakranet.org/ </a></p>
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