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grade school." The county court minutes addressing this proposal estimate maintenance between $ 3,000 and $ 4,000 per year and, despite the bad economic condition of the county at the time, the proposal was accepted. Grove made other contributions for the beautification of the campus and for the endeavors of the Parent
Teacher Association. After the death of E. W. Grove, Jr. in May 1934, a building was completed in 1937 designed as a
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218:. It is a "two story and basement building of gray pressed brick," the first of a few buildings comprising the Grove School campus. Grove High School was the first privately endowed public high school in Tennessee, opening in 1906. It was closed after graduating the class of 1969 and replaced by Henry County High School. The building was added to the
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Grove personally chose the site of the school on what was then known as
Jernigan Heights, previously known as McCampbell's Hill, the highest point in west Tennessee. T. P. Jernigan, the land owner, donated the 17 and one half acres chosen. The county acquired further land adjoining the site at a cost
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Weston Hall was completed in 1949 after the
Tennessee State Board of Education issued an emergency warning that building facilities at Grove High School were inadequate for the enrollment. It was named for A. S. Weston, a teacher who served for 26 years at Grove High School before his death in 1946.
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The estate of E. W. Grove, Jr. paid $ 10,000 to the Henry County Board of
Education in 1940 for the benefit of Grove High School. Of this, $ 4,000 was used to repair Cavitt Hall after it burned on January 27, 1943, and the remaining funds were used to install lights and hardwood floors in the Grove
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for girls. Cavitt Hall, a two-story and basement dormitory was completed by the summer of 1910 with contributions from E. W. Grove, Col. and Mrs. O. C. Barton, J. C. Rainey, A. H. Lankford and other citizens of Henry County. It was named for the family of Mrs. Barton. In 1924, it was converted to a
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Edwin Wiley Grove, Jr. took great interest in the school where his father left off. In 1931, he expressed the desire to memorialize his father by erecting several new buildings for manual training and commercial departments. His stipulation was that the county maintain the school as a "first class
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at a cost of $ 841.77. Joseph Tremby contracted for construction of the building, for which he was paid $ 28,946.89 and S. J. Veltman contracted for heating, plumbing and sewage for which he was paid $ 3,179.40, $ 1,459.60 and $ 525 respectively. Property for the school was a mix of donation and
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A second offer was made by Grove on July 3, 1905. Its terms stated that if the county and city would appropriate a sum of not less than $ 40,000 for the purposes of purchasing grounds, Grove would endow the school in the amount of $ 50,000 for the perpetual maintenance and operation. A board of
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In 1912, E. W. Grove began sending a regular payment of $ 150 to the principal with instructions that it be used to purchase fruit for the students. When the principal instead used it to improve the road leading up to the school, Grove stopped the payment.
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A Centennial celebration was held on June 24, 2006, including a re-enactment of the cornerstone placement, speeches and a wreath-laying ceremony at the grave of E. W. Grove, Sr. In attendance was James Grove Jr., great-grandson of E. W. Grove.
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In 1969, the last class was graduated at E. W. Grove High School. It was replaced, along with a handful of other rural high schools in Henry County, by Henry County High School. Grove Junior High School remained on the campus.
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After years of deterioration, Cavitt Hall was demolished in 1985. The Grove Tower building was saved from demolition in 1986 and became the home of the Henry County Board of
Education. It had been vacant since 1983.
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A new wing on the west side of Weston Hall was built in 1958 to house Grove Junior High School. Grades seven through nine were held there until 1979 when Grove Middle School took on grades seven and eight.
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Grove High School's first football team, the Chill Tonics, were coached by co-principal Dr. Clovis
Chappell. Their uniforms were provided by E. W. Grove and Barton Field was donated by Col. O. C. Barton.
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The first graduates of Grove High School were Louise
Johnsonius and Fern Madole. They were awarded their diplomas on a Sunday night in 1908 at a tent revival held in Paris by Rev. Lynn Broughton.
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When Grove died in
January 1927, his estate settled with the school's board of trust to make a final payment of $ 81,000 and terminate any regular monies paid as part of his original endowment.
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there on April 9, 1902. This offer stipulated that the county "establish and arrange for its maintenance." The Henry County
Quarterly Court rejected this offer, citing the prevalence of
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Dudley M. Clements, a popular Grove teacher and County
Demonstration Agent for Henry County, established the nation's first vocational agricultural program in 1917 under the
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Total expenditure in building the school was $ 46,400 paid in part by Henry county, the city of Paris and contributions from citizens. The building was designed by architect
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of $ 4,650. The cornerstone was ceremoniously laid by the Paris Masonic Lodge on June 26, 1906. A bottle of Grove's Tasteless Chill Tonic was placed in inside.
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Classes began in September 1906 in the library and council room of Paris City Hall until Christmas when Grove Tower building was finished.
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By 1910, the school was reported to have 150 pupils. About $ 15,000 had been raised by that time with the interest of building a
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trustees was further specified to handle the endowment. The court voted of 23 to 4 in favor of this offer.
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in the county over the previous three years but "recognizing in it a high and philanthropic motive."
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E. W. Grove School became the first stand-alone ninth grade school in the country in 1996.
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with rooms for manual training and commercial shops. Funds and labor were furnished by the
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home economics department and the basement continued to be used as a cafeteria until 1949.
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building, also known as Grove Tower, is a historic building located on Grove Boulevard in
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University and college buildings listed on the National Register of Historic Places
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At Barton Field, a stadium was built in 1948 and a field house was built in 1954.
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291:. In 1919, he was appointed State Superintendent of Vocational Agriculture.
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School buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Tennessee
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List of jails and prisons on the National Register of Historic Places
462:"A History of the E. W. Grove High School, Henry County, Tennessee"
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National Register of Historic Places in Henry County, Tennessee
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488:"History of Grove Junior High and Grove Middle School"
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Buildings and structures in Henry County, Tennessee
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History of the National Register of Historic Places
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464:. Univ. of Tennessee. Archived from
362:National Register of Historic Places
220:National Register of Historic Places
208:E.W. Grove Henry County High School
29:E.W. Grove Henry County High School
993:National Historic Preservation Act
260:purchase at a cost of $ 4,650.00.
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946:Federated States of Micronesia
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415:"Edwin Wiley Grove ~ Timeline"
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94:Show map of the United States
18:United States historic place
509:"Grove School Rededication"
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998:Historic Preservation Fund
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184:NRHP reference
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920:Northern Mariana Islands
460:Field, Maurice Houston.
170:Architectural style
216:Henry County, Tennessee
915:Minor Outlying Islands
898:Lists by insular areas
612:Keeper of the Register
226:Endowment and building
617:National Park Service
597:Contributing property
367:National Park Service
69:Show map of Tennessee
972:District of Columbia
468:on December 15, 2012
257:Reuben Harrison Hunt
164:Reuben Harrison Hunt
136:36.2929°N 88.3292°W
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231:Edwin Wiley Grove
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200:November 25, 1980
178:Classical Revival
141:36.2929; -88.3292
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472:December 1,
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235:high school
139: /
115:Coordinates
1055:Categories
874:Washington
794:New Mexico
789:New Jersey
664:California
340:References
174:Romanesque
127:88°19′45″W
124:36°17′34″N
884:Wisconsin
849:Tennessee
754:Minnesota
729:Louisiana
300:gymnasium
277:dormitory
222:in 1980.
160:Architect
1040:Category
869:Virginia
819:Oklahoma
799:New York
774:Nebraska
764:Missouri
749:Michigan
739:Maryland
724:Kentucky
704:Illinois
679:Delaware
669:Colorado
659:Arkansas
239:smallpox
191:80003835
104:Location
986:Related
889:Wyoming
864:Vermont
769:Montana
709:Indiana
689:Georgia
684:Florida
654:Arizona
644:Alabama
264:History
824:Oregon
779:Nevada
719:Kansas
694:Hawaii
649:Alaska
585:Topics
956:Palau
854:Texas
734:Maine
699:Idaho
212:Paris
152:Built
910:Guam
859:Utah
814:Ohio
714:Iowa
537:2012
516:2012
495:2012
474:2012
422:2012
206:The
155:1906
186:No.
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