Mountain Crest Academy
Shortly after graduating from Moody Bible Institute in Chicago, IL, John E. Jeter was sent out by the Presbyterian Church to start a new school in the remote mountains of Franklin County, Arkansas in 1916. John’s wife, Callie A. King Jeter, who had a lifetime teaching certificate from Arkansas College taught classes the first several years in their home while John raised money and built the buildings, eventually joining her with the teaching.
Present day photo of the Mountain Crest Academy.
Photos by James Kirkendall – (Kirk Exploration and Company)
Mountain Crest Academy was located seven miles south of Combs (Franklin County), just one mile from the Madison County line. The academy was one of a large number of schools founded by the Presbyterian Church to serve the “backward classes” of the rural mountain South. The church became interested in this home mission work around 1910 and established a large number of such schools, many of them in the Appalachian Mountains. By 1917, the Southern branch of the Presbyterian Church (the Presbyterian Church in the United States, or PCUS) was supporting forty-two such schools, which served more than 2,000 students. Some of the schools also emphasized local mountain crafts.
Excerpt from: http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=6943&fbclid=IwAR3DFGGzcUU0wn3cZwnH6C7DOaIDH5_UHZLgnYtVKRBiWFXrOEEptW_CbGs
Present day photo of the Mountain Crest Academy.
Photos by James Kirkendall – (Kirk Exploration and Company)
The campus eventually included two buildings. The first was a two-story stone building that had classrooms on the first floor and a library and dormitory for the boys on the second floor. The second building, located across the road, was a frame dormitory for girls. Mountain Crest was the only school in the area that offered twelve grades. Tuition was $1.00 per month, and poorer students could work to defray part of their tuition costs. Most of the school’s students came from Franklin, Madison, and Crawford counties. While Mountain Crest did not have a primary focus on local crafts, it did have a rug-weaving program, supported by the Daughters of the American Revolution, during the 1920s.
Excerpt from: http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=6943&fbclid=IwAR3DFGGzcUU0wn3cZwnH6C7DOaIDH5_UHZLgnYtVKRBiWFXrOEEptW_CbGs
John Jeter left the academy in 1925 to become a domestic missionary in Fayetteville (Washington County); by 1928, he had left the Presbyterian Church altogether. He was succeeded by the Reverend Holly Hunter Patrick, who was to remain the school’s superintendent until it closed in 1931. While the Depression undoubtedly contributed to the closing of the academy, it was probably also a result of the 1931 decision of the General Assembly of the PCUS not to continue supporting mission schools where there were adequate state schools, or where they did not provide forms of training “which are not provided by the state, and which are necessary to the permanence and progress of the Church in the region served.”
The Synod of Arkansas sold the Mountain Crest property to a Reverend Hamby of the Pentecostal Church in 1943, donating the proceeds to Arkansas College (now Lyon College) in Batesville (Independence County) to provide scholarships for students from the Ozark Mountains. The buildings were used for summer camp meetings for several years before they were sold to a local farmer. The stone classroom building was still standing in 2009 and was being used as a farm building.
Excerpt from: http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=6943&fbclid=IwAR3DFGGzcUU0wn3cZwnH6C7DOaIDH5_UHZLgnYtVKRBiWFXrOEEptW_CbGs
For additional information:
Blevins, Brooks. “Mountain Mission Schools in Arkansas.” Arkansas Historical Quarterly 70 (Winter 2011): 398–428.
“The Mountaincrest Academy” and “Mountaincrest Academy.” Madison County Musings 28 (Summer 2009): 80.
Excerpt from: http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=6943&fbclid=IwAR3DFGGzcUU0wn3cZwnH6C7DOaIDH5_UHZLgnYtVKRBiWFXrOEEptW_CbGs
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