History of Castle Peak District Number 26
But the little school did not prosper. Dry winds came sweeping across the cotton fields, burning up the crops, and wafting away the hopes of the farm folk. They must move away to a country where cooling rains fell, where farms yielded bountiful harvests. Soon there were so few people left that it was decided to move the school-house away.In the shadow of the mountains, among the cedars, stood the little Rock Crossing school-house. It had been built by the men from the neighboring farms, and under its roof the children n the farms gathered to learn the lessons that were to help them to be true Americans.
Again the men of the neighborhood gathered and soon the school-house was on its way. The trip was not a long one and the little building was again set in the foot-hills of the mountains. To the south of it rose the rocky crest where the eagle nests each year-Castle Peak.
"What shall we call our school this time?" asked one of the men. The question was not answered until the men, looking southward, watched the evening sun's rays lighting the hills and changing the drab peaks into warm purples and greys against the glowing sky. Then they saw there the name they wanted for the school-Castle Peak. So Castle Peak is the continuation of the old Rock Crossing school, that sat near by almost thirty years ago.Class Roll
FIRST GRADE SECOND GRADE FIFTH GRADE SEVENTH GRADE Mabel Cox Bell Patterson Beulab Cogburn Ila May Hughes Jackie Jones Alma Hughes Virgil PattersonRose Snider Ruth Jones Tommie Patterson Mozelle Bell FOURTH GRADE SIXTH GRADE Haskell Moore Oleta Snider Alma Cox Jimmie Moore Harold Hughes Odena Pribble Clo Sullivan G.W. Hughes Artie Lee Pannell Granville Bell Alton Snider Odis PribbleReference: The Buffalo Trail 1922