The Standard Journal

Robotics takes center stage at camp at Northside

- From staff reports

]Barely a week after the Fairview- E. S. Brown School in Cave Spring was added the National Register of Historic Places, the Georgia Department of Natural Resources Historic Preservati­on Division has awarded a $23,000 grant for work at the school site.

The initial campus was constructe­d in the mid 1920s with financial assistance from the Rosenwald Fund, a philant hropic organizati­on founded by Julius Rosenwald and Booker T. Washington, for the education of African- American children. The building that still stands was constructe­d circa 1945.

The Fairview- E. S. Brown Heritage Corp. in Cave Spring partnered with the city of Rome to submit the grant applicatio­n. Joyce Perdue-Smith, chairwoman of the corporatio­n, said her group partnered with the city of Rome because it is a Certified Local Government and eligible to apply for the grant.

To be eligible to become a federal Certified Local Government, a city or county must have passed a preservati­on ordinance and have establishe­d a historic preservati­on commission.

Smith said the $23,000 grant was the second largest in the current round of funding. “We’re so happy to be among the top groups to get money this time,” Perdue-Smith said. “I think that says a lot about the importance of our project.”

Kevin McAuliff, a planner at the Northwest Georgia Regional Commission who wrote the grant applicatio­n, said the DNR/ HP division would meet with the Fairview E.S. Brown Corporatio­n to detail exactly how the state wants the funds to be used.

“They’re going to present Fairview with a contract and that contract is going to flesh- in what specifical­ly HPD wants done with its money,” McAuliff said. “I can guarantee you that basically it’s going to be structural stabilizat­ion work. It needs foundation work, it needs floor work, it needs wall work and it needs roof work. In other words it needs about everything.”

The Fairview- E. S. Brown Heritage Corp., working with the Floyd County Board of Education, wants to create a “l i ving campus” f or t eaching t raditional trades and crafts such as carpentry and woodworkin­g. The approximat­ely three and a half acres around t he building would offer space for cultivated plots to teach children to garden.

The grant is a 60/ 40 grant, meaning the local community has to provide a 40 percent match, approximat­ely $ 15,000.

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 ??  ?? Northside Elementary hosted students back in June for their second annual DawgBots camp, where youth got to learn about programmin­g a variety of robots.
Northside Elementary hosted students back in June for their second annual DawgBots camp, where youth got to learn about programmin­g a variety of robots.
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