The Torch - FSU College of Education Magazine, Spring 2020

Page 24

The Impact of Partnerships: The Southern Scholarship Foundation and the College of Education By Kevin Derryberry

“F

or me, Southern Scholarship Foundation was the key to the door of going to Florida State,” recalls Patricia (Duggins) Sigmon who earned her B.S. (’66) and M.S. (’67) in health education at FSU.

While a student, Sigmon lived in the Future Educators of America (FEA) house on Palm Court and both she and her husband Keith (B.S. ’66) remember the house fondly. “It had a warm feel to it, with a great group of girls. It was a neat little place.” Today, Palm Court serves as an access road to the sorority houses of Park Avenue and Calhoun Street. A parking lot replaced the last of the buildings, but in the 1960s, the Sigmons remember the Palm Court House of the Southern Scholarship Foundation as “an old three story house that had a wide front porch with a swing. It was only a block from Westcott and the Mecca, and just across from Old City Cemetery.”

of any program who need support to cover housing costs, more than 800 College of Education students at FSU have directly benefitted from Stone’s vision of a communal living arrangement for students who could not afford the living expenses of attending college. Stone’s daughter, Nancy Thompson, recalls the impetus for the Southern Scholarship Foundation. “I was probably six years old when one of the college boys or high school boys came to our front door and said, ‘Dr. Stone, I would like to go to college, but I have no money,’ and so my dad started thinking.” Stone was a professor of teacher education and knew that hard-working students could succeed if he eliminated the financial barriers to education, so he looked for a solution. During WWII, the Army Air Corp had built barracks on the western side of campus, so Stone reached out to members of the community to provide funds to rent one of the unused buildings for the first three students. The very first of whom was Enoch Hanna (B.S. ’53), a career teacher whom Stone first met while speaking at Hanna’s high school graduation. The experience left an impression on Hanna that would last the rest of his life. “To see so many people that were interested in seeing us get an education impressed us and we wanted to help those that we came into contact with to have the same opportunities.”

“Men weren’t allowed past the kitchen,” Sigmon remembers, “not that there was much to see. There were four bunks to a room, no air conditioning and communal desks.” Though she’s quick to add that the women who filled Palm Court made it a home. The Southern Scholarship Foundation has provided affordable housing for thousands of students at Florida State University since its founding in 1953 by former College of Education Professor and Dean Mode Stone. While the Southern Scholarship Foundation provides a place for students

2019–2020 Stone house residents

24 | THE TORCH - FSU COLLEGE OF EDUCATION MAGAZINE


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