** ?* wSffiSK U,MRY I 3.' ' Published each Thursday since January 18, 1973 ?B. 8 (ft U J : P*H C -.? (i -Mat /* I I> 0 fv . ::|ft ' . . ; ;'S : ' ' ! SI J at* n tVK.f/ r,~ r.fA ?r,vr/rtv,x " yv?L>l? the Croatan Normal School, 46431111% to Dr. Adolph Dial, Lumbee Indian d historian. "ty. New Hope, we had a class in AIJCs, arithmetic and geography, and you could go to the blackboard if you were higher up (the better students)," Lowry said. "We used a blue-back speller, but a lot of students didn't have books. Those whose relatives 'had books were the fortunate ones." Lowry said classes were "ungraded" in those days, meaning one worked at his own level. "Regardless of how much schooling a student had, when one wanted to become a teacher, he went before the Board of Education to take an exam. If he passed, he was given a certificate. I took my exam in the summer of '22 when I was 23 years old and started teaching the third grade at Union Chapel School where I taught for two years. I alsd taught at Pembroke Graded School for two years, then later in South Carolina. In all, I taught for 15 years and had other occupations." He also did carpentry work, brick work, and "took blueprinting" at the Normal School. "I put in the door in the old Normal School gym in '39," Lowry said. "I also built five garages for faculty members." (Note: PSU used to have a faculty row of houses on campus.) Lowry now owns 150 acres of crops, mostly beans and corn. Hie New Hope School photograph, in which Lowry is kneeling as the first person on the left, also includes three persons who figured prominently in PSU history- One was the teacher, Anderson Locklear, a leading educator of Robeson County in whose honor Locklear Hall, completed on the PSU campus in 1950, was named. Another was Clifton Oxendine, who became the first dean of what was then the Indian Normal School of Robeson County in 1939-40. Oxendine was awarded an honorary doctorate by PSU in 1986, and the lecture hall in Classroom North was named in his honor in 1988. Clifton Oxendine, now deceased, was the uncle of present PSU Chancellor Joseph Oxendine. But even more significant, the picture of the Newflope School class of 1907-08 included Tom Oxendine, the father of the present chancellor. He also became a teacher as did six of his eight children, including Chancellor Oxendine. Of Tom Oxendine, who also became a principal, lowry said: "He was the kind who enjoyed life, loved to fish and was good at athletics. He always hollered out so people could hear him at the ball games." Speaking of the chancellor, Lowry said, "He's pretty smart and is doing a good job. He's trying to treat all people alike." Looking at the picture of the New Hope School class of 1907-08, Lowry commented: "At least 40 percent of those in this picture became teachers. Only about four in the picture are still living. A couple of them left town, and I don't know whether they are living or dead. A lot of them died young because they lived in bad houses and got winter colds." Lowry pointed to the clothes the students wore in the picture. "Most people could not afford sewing machines then, and people had to make clothes with their fingers," he said. Lowry was born March 11, 1889. His wife, the former Sarah Hunt, was born Sept. 10, 1905 and died Sept. 27, 1988, of Alzheimer's Disease. Of their 14 children, the first was Inez, born in 1923, and the youngest is William, born in 1952. Lowry, who owns many historical books, spoke of how much churches in those early years played such an important role in educating students in this vicinity. "The churches helped the children leam to read and write in Sunday school." he said. Chancellor Oxendine and his brother, Hughes, who were visiting Lowry during this interview, make some observations in talking to lowry. Chancellor Oxendine noted, in speaking of history, that his great grandfather. John, "was one of the petitioners of what became Pembroke State University." The chancellor added that most of his relatives went to school and became school teachers. Hughes, former director of all federal programs for the Hoke County Board of Education and now retired, said of Lowry. "When I learned (from Joe Oxendine) that Joe was going to be the new chancellor of PSU (in 1989), I passed Mr. Claude LowTy going to his mailbox in front of his house and said to myself,, 'This man deserves to know.' And I told him." Lowny enjoyed this first-hand knowledge about the new chancellor, and his spunk at 91 years old showed through as he concluded. "I stopped teaching in '54. but I've never considered myself retired," referring to his 150 acres of farm land and other interests. "I ride my own lawn mower, cook my own meals and do my own washing and laundry." And as a person who knows the histoiy of the area, he proves to be a valuable resource. Claude Lowry has many stories to share. PHOTOS AND TEXT COLRTESY OF PSl' rt HUC INFORM A TTON DIRECTOR GENE WARREN Shown below is Claude Lowry Iriijhtl uho lit>es on a iarm just outside Pembroke, identifying the classmates of the 1907-08 class of New Hope S hoot uhich uas located adjacent to the Normal School which became Pembroke State Uminrrsity. Shown with Lowry is PSU Chancellor Joseph Oiendine whose father, Tbm Orrndinc, wo* m the picture.