Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘ COMING HOME’

GRAC E B AP T I ST ACADEMY CHILDREN’S CENTER REOPENS MONDAY

- BY MARY FORTUNE // STAFF WRITER

The children will be back Monday morning, for the first time since a devastatin­g tornado tore through the Grace Baptist Academy Children’s Center on Shallowfor­d Road late on Easter night.

“Everyone who’s coming back says it’s like coming home again,” said Sheri Hicks, the director of the center for little ones from infancy to preschool. “I feel like it kind of gives us hope.”

The reconstruc­tion of the children’s center began in June, and was in its very last stages the week of Thanksgivi­ng, with workers spreading gravel and handling finishing touches around the property.

Behind the center, however, where the rest of Grace Baptist Academy once stood, the scene is very different.

“It is eerie,” Hicks acknowledg­ed, surveying the largely barren, 17-acre campus. “It’s like a little oasis in the middle of all this ugly.”

The violent storm that hit Grace, one of seven to rake the region in the last hours of Easter night, blasted the campus and surroundin­g neighborho­ods with 145 mph winds. More than 550 students attended the K-12 Grace Baptist Academy, and 450-500 people attended Grace Baptist Church every Sunday.

The children’s center was hit hard but remained structural­ly sound, somehow spared the worst of the storm’s direct impact. The building was gutted and rebuilt from the studs. The rest of Grace Baptist Academy, though, was gone.

“They had to completely take it down,” Hicks said.

About half the children’s center’s 35 teachers have been caring for the babies and toddlers from their homes, and the other half have been at nearby Morris Hill Baptist Church, which has become the temporary location of Grace Baptist Academy, Hicks said.

Many of the roughly 110 families the children’s center serves in its 14 classrooms will return,

but others won’t, Hicks said. Some are still working from home, and others were forced to leave the community.

“Some families have had to move,” she said. “A lot of our families were from this area, and they were devastated.”

Hicks lives in Cleveland, and heard late Easter night from a teacher who lives near the child care center that her home had been hit by a massive tornado. Hicks drove down Interstate 75 to Shallowfor­d Road in the dark, parked at the YMCA just over half a mile away and walked as far as she could through the

dark chaos. She couldn’t reach the school.

“There were power lines all over the road, and there was no getting across,” she said.

School leaders have said they will rebuild, and the signs of those plans all around the children’s center — which may be a mixed blessing as the small students return, Hicks said.

“The kids will love all the constructi­on,” she said. “Nap time might be a challenge, but that’s OK. I think they’ll just be glad to be back.”

In an announceme­nt of the center’s reopening,

Head of School Matt Pollock said the center, which began as a day care inside Grace Baptist Church in 1989, has built a long tradition that the staff looks forward to continuing.

“I am very pleased to see so many of our families anticipati­ng the return of their children to the loving and skillful care of our staff,” he said. “It is certainly a tribute to our excellent staff that these parents have waited so patiently for us to open once again.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY C. B. SCHMELTER ?? Above: The recently rebuilt Grace Children’s Center, left, will reopen Monday after Easter storms devastated the campus. The rest of the Grace Academy campus, seen at center right, is still a scene of devastatio­n. Below: A piece of glass decorated with Psalm 118:24 survived the Easter tornoados and now serves as a window to a reconstruc­ted classroom.
STAFF PHOTOS BY C. B. SCHMELTER Above: The recently rebuilt Grace Children’s Center, left, will reopen Monday after Easter storms devastated the campus. The rest of the Grace Academy campus, seen at center right, is still a scene of devastatio­n. Below: A piece of glass decorated with Psalm 118:24 survived the Easter tornoados and now serves as a window to a reconstruc­ted classroom.
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 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY C. B. SCHMELTER ?? The recently rebuilt Grace Children’s Center, left, and the rest of the Grace campus is seen Wednesday in Chattanoog­a.
STAFF PHOTO BY C. B. SCHMELTER The recently rebuilt Grace Children’s Center, left, and the rest of the Grace campus is seen Wednesday in Chattanoog­a.

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