Vanishing Schools of Franklin County

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A01=Abraham H. Gibson
A01=William B. Gibson
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Annual Reports of the Superintendent of Public Instruction
Archie G. Richardson
architectureal history
Author_Abraham H. Gibson
Author_William B. Gibson
Blue Ridge Institute BRI
Blue Ridge Mountains
Brown v. Board of Education
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commercial buildings
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education
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Ferrum College
forthcoming
Franklin Chronicle
Franklin County High School
Franklin County Historical Society
Franklin News-Post
heritage conservation
historical research
hyperlocal history
infrastructure
Jackson Davis
Karl Edwards
Library of Virginia LVA
local media
lost communities
Massive Resistance
moonshine
one-room schools
postwar modernization
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private homes
racial integration
Rocky Mount
Rosenwald schools
ruins
rural schools
Sanborn Map Company
School Buildings Service Photographs Collection
school consolidation
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Smithey & Boynton architectural firm
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Virginia Chronicle website
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780813955681
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: University of Virginia Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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An in-depth history that assesses the price of progress and the legacy of lost rural American communities

Nestled among the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains in southwestern Virginia, Franklin County is the undisputed "Moonshine Capital of the World." But Franklin County was not as lawless as its reputation would suggest. In addition to making moonshine, the citizens of Franklin County also made a monumental effort to educate their children. In the early twentieth century, Franklin County had more schools than any other locality in the state, per capita. Today, they have all but vanished.

Most of these schools were simple one-room buildings located in abandoned fields. Their foundations were built with local stones, and their walls were built with local timber. Most did not have electricity, running water, or indoor bathrooms. These schools were once vital to life in Franklin County. In this book, a father and son with deep roots in the community set out to recover the history of these long-forgotten schools. They have combed through the archives and trekked through the woods in their efforts to identify, map, and photograph every single school in the historical record. Along the way, they have learned valuable lessons that extend well beyond the Appalachian foothills and into the present day.

William B. Gibson is the retired Principal of Franklin County High School in Rocky Mount, Virginia, and the author of A History of Franklin County High School. Abraham H. Gibson is Associate Professor of History at the University of Nebraska, Lincoln, and the author of Feral Animals in the American South: An Evolutionary History.

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