White Oak School site in White Oak, North Carolina

2024 Reunion ReSCHEDULED For Saturday, September 14, 2024

140 Persons attending to date, August 27th

To see list, click on Complete Register, then select Attending This Year, enter true, Sort

Reunion information:

Date Saturday, September 14, 2024

Location White Oak School Gymnasium

Time 2:00 pm until

Meal time 4:00 pm

Meal furnished by Kinlaw Catering, Fayetteville

Cost $ 20.00 per person

Menu Basically same as previous years

Registration Information

Amount $ 20.00 per person

Name(s) person attending

Address, phone number, email address, and year a senior in high school

Mail to David Coble

118 E Nance St

Whiteville, NC 28472

My email dcoble733@gmail.com

My Phone # (910) 770-0807

White Oak School marker

White Oak School marker

WHITE OAK SCHOOL -A BRIEF CHRONOLOGY

The school began its existence as an educational institution in 1878. Three years later (1881) White Oak Academy was built by the people of the community, a large, one-room, wooden building. An extra room was added to the south side of the academy in 1901 to house primary students.

In 1902, the first typewriter for the school was purchased for the business department and a library was established with 500 volumes. Two years later another wing was added to the east side and two additional rooms were built onto the front in 1905. White Oak Academy was the only high school in Bladen County for many years.

Enrollment in 1902 totaled 131 and increased to 175 by 1904. Boarding students paid $6.00 to $7.00 per month to reside in private homes. Tuition fees per term were set at $5.00 for primary, $7.50 for intermediate,  $ 10.00 in the common school department and $12.50 in the academic department.

In 1908, Principal W W Woodhouse’s dream of a dormitory for boarding students was realized. Melvina Cain was the first housekeeper and cook for the residents.

The academy burned in 1918 and a movement got underway to consolidate some of the nearby schools with White Oak. A new brick building was to be erected on the site of the destroyed academy. Brick were made by D. M. Tatum from clay at a location near the present Post Office. Classes were conducted in the dormitory until the fall of 1922. Schools known to have been consolidated included Ammon, Live Oak, Central and Lake.

A gymnasium and agriculture shop were added in the 1940’s and a new cafeteria in the early 1950’s. Educational facilities and organization remained basically unchanged until 1967. White Oak High School students began attending Tar Heel High School and New Light Elementary was consolidated with White Oak, with the facility housing K-8 students and renamed White Oak Elementary. The school ceased to exist as such in the spring of 1977. Kindergarten through Sixth grade youngsters enrolled in the fall at Bladen Lakes, new facility located near Jones Lake. The seventh and eighth grade pupils began attending Tar Heel.