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About Searcy's Old Searcy Arkansas

Klyster Knox's 1952 kindergarten class at Searcy Arkansas. Bunch of cuties!!!

Barbara S. Duncan ABR, CRS, GRI, e-PRO Searcy AR  : Real Estate Agent in Searcy, AR

Mrs. Knox school kids

I borrowed this picture from the White County Historical Society News, March 2009. It shows so many cute children on the porch of Mrs. Klyster Knox's home on North Main in Searcy Arkansas. The article stated that she started her kindergarten in 1949 with 12 children. It grew until it had 60 children and she had to add a building behind her house for the school. She operated the school for 25 years so lots of kids posed on this front porch for their class pictures. The little boy with cowboy boots on the front row is my husband's brother. The article names most of the children and lots of them are still in Searcy Arkansas.

The house still stands and is just as stately as it was when she began the school. It has a new owner but is still loved. Here's the way it looks now.

Just looking at each of these little children gathered for their school picture makes me feel all warm and fuzzy. What about you?

Knox kindergarten house

The same front porch.

Knox kindergarten house

Before and after, Cumberland Presbyterian Church in Searcy Arkansas

Barbara S. Duncan ABR, CRS, GRI, e-PRO Searcy AR  : Real Estate Agent in Searcy, AR

Cumberland Presbyterian Church

Here she is. Stark, lovely, unhurried, dirt street, in downtown Searcy Arkansas in approximately 1910. This is the Cumberland Presbyterian Church that is across the street from our historic Rialto Theater on Race Street. You could toss a rock from this church and hit our Courthouse. It almost looks like a couple of people on the right?

Now here she is today. She's still lovely but you have to fight through the traffic and the power lines and the concrete to get to her. We're proud of her and looks as if the congregation is taking care of a few problems with the aged steeple. Cumberland Presbyterian Church

Aerial view of Harding College prior to 1951, Godden Hall featured.

Barbara S. Duncan ABR, CRS, GRI, e-PRO Searcy AR  : Real Estate Agent in Searcy, AR

aerial view Searcy AR old

This picture of the location of Harding University in Searcy Arkansas is fascinating. Trees are small, the space between houses is large and there is this huge building that was Godden Hall, according to Raymond Muncy's History of Searcy published in 1975.

Godden Hall was reportedly torn down in 1951 to make way for Harding University's new Administration Building. Ones who grew up in Searcy can probably name lots of the houses seen in this photograph and possibly still standing. It's a great view of the past.

The old John Sanford mansion that was on Arch Street in Searcy Arkansas

Barbara S. Duncan ABR, CRS, GRI, e-PRO Searcy AR  : Real Estate Agent in Searcy, AR

I found this old newspaper clipping with the title of "The Way We Were."

It should say the way some people were.....what a house! Notice the kids in the windows upstairs and more on the front steps. One thing about blogging is the way it makes you more conscious of your surroundings, your town, the past, and the things that are here today and will probably be gone tomorrow.

This house is not one that I remember. It was replaced by the West Side Church of Christ. Now I wish I knew what it looked like when it was torn down. Was it dilapidated? Was it just a coveted location? If anyone has a better picture of it, let's see it.

House search for Searcy Arkansas readers. Green Booth house?

Barbara S. Duncan ABR, CRS, GRI, e-PRO Searcy AR  : Real Estate Agent in Searcy, AR

green booth house

Looking through an old Historical Society book I found this house and just knew where it was located. The nice curved porch support was unique. So I decided to do a before and after shot.I drove by the house here Searcy Arkansasjust knowing I'd located the right house. I snapped my photo and hurried back to the office. This is a finely maintained older home located near Harding University and I drive by it all the time.

WRONG!

The houses are not at all alike.

So while in a little surrounding town I saw that unique curved porch support again and snapped another picture thinking it could be it. WRONG!

house in Kensett

Yep, wrong again.

So I'm asking whether my Searcy readers can tell me if this Green Booth house is still in existence or was it perhaps torn down for a parking lot.

The search is on! I have some super sleuths as friends out there!