Since 1998 - Historical and Genealogical
Resources
for the Upper New River Valley of North Carolina and Virginia
Calendar
Fall Session begins Monday, September 17.
Thanksgiving Holiday, Thursday, November 29.
Fall Session ends Friday, December 1.
Winter Session beginngs Monday, December 10
Christmas Vacation, December 21 to January 2.
Washington's Birthday Celebration, February 22.
Winter Session Ends, Friday 15.
Final Examinations, April 29-30.
Commencement Exercises, May 2-3.
Faculty
Guy F. Carr, Principal, Mathematics, English, History and
Business Course.
C. Kyle Osborne, Latin, French, English and History
Miss. Laura Lou Carr (Bridle Creek Academy), Primary
Department.
Miss. Della Young, Music and Elocution.
Board of Directors
A. C. Painter, President - Galax, Va.
J. B. Landreth, Secretary - Galax, Va.
J. P. Carico, Galax, Va.
M. L. Bishop, Galax, Va.
W. L. Hart, Galax, Va.
Dr. J. B. Caldwell, Galax, Va.
Dr. A. G. Pless, Galax, Va.
J. H. Kyle, Baywood, Va.
Course of Study
Primary Department
First Grade--Speller, First Reader, with Board Exercises and Slate
work, Nature Lessions, Reproduction of Short Stories.
Second Grade--Spelling, Second Reader, First Lessions in Numbers,
First Lessons in Penmanship, Simple Exercises in Composition.
Third Grade--Spelling, Third Reader, First Lessons in Geography,
Primary Arithmetic, Penmanship, Language Exercises
Fourth Grade--Spelling, Fourt Reader, Elementary Geography,
Intermediate Arithmetic, Penmanship, Language Exercises
Junior Class--Fall Term--General History, Plane Geometry,
Rhetoric, Higher Algebra, Caesar.
Winter Term--General History, Plane Geometry, Rhetoric, Higher
Algebra, Caesar.
Spring Term--General History, Plane Geometry, Rhetoric, Higher
Algebra, Caesar.
Senior Class--Fall Term--French Grammar, American Literature,
Physical Geography, Solid Geometry, Cicero.
Winter Term--French Reader, English Literature, Physics, Solid
Geometry, Cicero.
Spring Term--French Reader, English Literature, Physics, Plane
Trigonometry, Virgil
Music Department
The course is arranged in five grades.
Grade I-Methods-The five finger exercises, with due regard to the
control and development of the hand. Major and minor scales.
Practical methods in Koeler, Czerney's easiest studies and easy
pieces given by standard composers.
Grade II-More difficult finger exercises. Wrist exercises
emphasized. Studies of Helier, Czerney, and Berens, with easy duets
and pieces.
Grade III-Major and minor scales from memory. Contrary motion
scales. Exercises in phrasing. Studies continued and easiest
sonatas of Mozart and Hayden added. Duet and trio work.
Grade IV--The scales in the thirds and the sixths. Technical
exercises continued. Mendlessohn's Songs without words, Bach's
Preludes, Shubert, and more advanced studies of Heller.
Grade V-Octave studies, Beethoven's sonatas, Chopin's valses,
nocturnes, and so forth. More advanced studies of Schumann, Bach,
Mozart concert pieces. Symphonies arranged with stringed
insturments.
Lessons on the violin, guitar, and mandolin will be given to those who desire to take.
Departments
Primary and Grammar.
Realizing the importance of thoroughness in these departments, our
teachers will spare no pains in presenting, by means of up-to-date
methods, the first principles of education. Thoroughness will
characterize their work at all times. Every pupil must do primary
work before he can do higher work, then it shall be our aim to lay
deep foundations for the work of the academic course.
Academic Department--Our purpose in this course is to prepare boys and girls for college, for teaching, and for better living. We do not expect all our pupils to go to college, but our course of study, if mastered, will make good citizens, and the most successful business men and women.
In any walk of life men and women must have an ordinary English education. The times demand it. There is no excuse to-day for illiteracy. The strenth of our State is determined by the education of its citizens, and we are glad that our school officials are making efforts to place Virginia in the column where she has a right to stand.
We prepare boys and girls for teaching. It is not enough for our teachers to be masters of the texts they teach, but a knowledge of the higher work gives them a reserve fund and an inexhaustible supply of force and facts needed every day of their lives.
Music Department--Music is a science and the study of it trains the mind just as the study of any other science does. Its influence on the social life is too great to allow it to be neglected. It adds greatly to the pleasures of life, and refines every faculty of the human being.
The teacher of this course is well prepared for her work.
Elocution--This department has been too much neglected, especially by our boys. If possible, boys need elocutionary training more than girls, as their business seems to demand expression of thought more often.
No pupil can appreciate an eduction until he has been trained in expression.
The success of our commencements, as well as almost all our future undertakings, depends upon how we partronize this department.
Business Department--Realizing that so many of our pupils must go quietly into the practical future of life we have provided a very thorough business course, consisting of modern practical bookkeeping, typewriting, commercial law, commercial arithmetic, and penmanship.
Now, we do not put this course before a literary course, but we have designed them to go together. A thorough literary traing should underlie all special training, and we do not recomment that any student should take a Business Course till he has a fair knowledge of the basic studies of a broader education. All who take this course will have special drill in Arithmetic, Grammar, and Spelling.
The teacher of this department has had a thorough course and has had experience in his profession. He is in direct communication with the heads of leading business firms all over the country and can readily place his pupils in good positions.
Literary Societies--Active Literary Societies will be organized early in the first session, and all will be urged to take part. We consider no department of our work more important.
Important Information
Location--Galax High School is at Galax, a little country town at the terminus of the Norfolk and Western Railway. It is free from the temptations and evils characteristic of so many of our towns and cities. Our citizenship cannot be excelled anywhere, and our people are thoroughly alive to the interests of our School.
Loitering about town is forbidden at all times. Any boy who proves incorrigibly idle or who uses intoxicating drink at all will be returned to his parents. The Principal reserves the right to remove any pupil who makes himself persistently disagreeable to teachers or pupils.
The pupil will be put upon honor as long as he is worthy of it, and the relation between teacher and pupil will be, as far as possible, one of natural confidence and respect.
Fall Term opens Monday, September 17, 1906
For further information, address: G. F. Carr, Principal, Galax,
VA.