Holly Springs school celebrates 70th anniversary with alumni, friends, students

By Laura Grisham
HOLLY SPRINGS – This year, St. Mary’s/CADET/Holy Family School celebrates 70 wonderful years of education.
During Labor Day weekend, several hundred alumni and educators gathered to celebrate. No doubt it was also a grand undertaking for those on the reunion committee, and in particular, chairman Vincent Smith (Class of 1981).
Two years after World War II ended, Sacred Heart Father Paul Frichtl, bought an old abandoned school building in Holly Springs and began to make enough repairs to make the building usable. In 1948, the St. Mary School for African American children opened.
The following year, four School Sisters of St. Francis arrived to work with him. When St. Mary’s began, eighth grade was the highest level offered. Another grade was added each year until all 12 grades were available. In 1954, the first seniors were graduated from St. Mary’s High School.
In 1969, St. Mary’s merged with St. Joseph’s to form C.A.D.E.T. (Christian Aided Development Through Extraordinary Training). CADET Child Care Center opened in 1974 with 25 children and CADET High School closed. A new computer lab was installed for students in 1995, and with that, CADET changed its name to Holy Family School in order to provide a stronger Catholic identity.
“Seven decades have brought about many changes in our world and in our schools, but the commitment of Sacred Heart Southern Missions (SHSM) and the Priests of the Sacred Heart to educating hearts and minds remains steadfast,” said Fr. Jack Kurps, SCJ, executive director of SHSM.

Above, a pep squad of current Holy Family Students cheered on those attending the reunion during a Friday night meet-and-greet. At right, Sr. Cathy Mauge, OSF, and Cathedral Pryor Wilkins at the picnic on Sunday.

“Our school has been and remains a sanctuary for children, where they are safe and receive guidance, discipline and love. Our students receive a quality education — a firm foundation not only in academics, but also in Christian values and respect for one another.”
Friday evening, guests were treated to a meet and greet, complete with tasty food and jazzy entertainment. The Holy Family Pep Squad greeted alumni with cheers and acrobatics to begin the evening. Beta Club members offered tours of the building.
The next day alumni volunteers cleaned out the school’s basement. Much to the delight of current Principal Clara Isom, two dump trailers of trash were removed. Equally hard work was being performed upstairs as members of the reunion committee set up and decorated for the banquet scheduled for later in the evening.
Nearly 200 former students, teachers and principals attended the gala Saturday night. The evening began, as does every event, with a prayer. Several alumni addressed the gathering, sharing fond memories.

HOLLY SPRINGS –The reunion chior had the crowd on its feet singing ‘Oh Happy Day’ at a Sunday morning worship service to celebrate Holy Family School’s 70th anniversary during the Labor Day weekend. (Photos by Laura Grisham)

Former Cadet principal, Sister Sheila Kloss, OSF, was the guest speaker for the night. Traveling all the way from California for the event with another former CADET educator, Sister Cathy Mauge, OSF. She greeted attendees with heartfelt enthusiasm. Citing the gospel, “’Lord, it is good for us to be here. This is a sacred place.’ All of us and many others over the years made this a sacred place by coming together to live, to learn, to love.”
Sunday began in earnest with a rousing worship service. Prayers, scripture and hymns filled every corner of the school gymnasium. The Reunion Choir and Rev. Catherine Robinson Willett had everyone on their feet with “Oh Happy Day.”
Services ended prior to noon, giving those in attendance just enough time to don their blue reunion t-shirts and some comfortable shoes before attending a closing picnic.

(A longer version of this story appeared in the Sacred Heart Southern Missions newsletter.)

 

Volunteers enjoy hearty ‘thank you’ from SHSM

By Laura Grisham
HOLLY SPRINGS – People from 19 area churches and civic groups came to the Garden Cafe Monday, Sept. 8, for a celebration in honor of their service to Sacred Heart Southern Mission (SHSM), Holly Springs Social Services and the Garden Cafe.
The annual dinner is a small token of thanks for the many hours of hard work these dedicated people do to make sure the needy in Holly Springs get a healthy, hearty, hot meal twice a week.
The Garden Cafe was started in 2009 as a way to better use food donations received by Holly Springs Social services. When it first opened it drew only 30 or 40 clients for its once-a-week seating. Once word got out, the numbers doubled. Now it offers meals twice a week, on Tuesdays and Thursdays, and recently averaged 121 guests at each service.

Volunteers from 19 churches and civic groups enjoy an appreciation dinner at the Garden Cafe run by Sacred Heart Southern Missions (Photo by Laura Grisham)

Volunteers from 19 churches and civic groups enjoy an appreciation dinner at the Garden Cafe run by Sacred Heart Southern Missions (Photo by Laura Grisham)

Volunteer coordinator Kelly Tartt thanked all of the attendees, saying, “Time is the one gift you give that you can never get back. It is the greatest gift of all.”
After giving thanks, the guests were treated to a meal prepared by cafe coordinator Ralph Howard and volunteer Alan Stanford from the American Red Cross.
When asked how he managed a steak dinner for everyone, Ralph grinned with excitement. “Wal-Mart,” he explained. “I get a call most everyday for pickup. They give me everything a man could ask for to make all this possible – meat, oil dry milk, you name it.”
During dinner, Lois Harrison gave the Protection of Children presentation. This is a requirement for all volunteers and employees who work with children.
Ralph was pleasantly surprised when a longtime volunteer and Cadet/St. Mary’s alumni presented him with a $500 donation to go toward a new freezer for the Holly Springs Social Service food pantry. Vincent Smith and his family decided to make the donation in honor of the 10th anniversary of the death of his father, James Smith. “We know he would really like that,” said Vincent. “That would really make him proud.”
After dinner, Lois, Ralph and Kelly recognized each of the volunteer organizations with a certificate of appreciation. Volunteers were also given individual tokens from the mission.”We wanted everyone to know how very much their time and effort is appreciated,” said Lois.
Ralph commented at the recent social service meeting that he had never seen such giving from an entire community. “It’s amazing! I am blessed to be in this position,” he said.
Without volunteers from all of the churches and groups; without donors like Vincent and his family; without corporate sponsors like Wal-Mart, the Garden Cafe would not be able to serve thousands of people each year. Many people simply would not eat.
(Laura Grisham is the public relations coordinator for Sacred Heart Southern Missions)