4 minute read
Au Revoir Mon Ami
Bailey, young hearts call out to thee –Hearts that are young for the cares to be, And call to thee in different lights And seek thee out through weary night; And they look to thee for their strength of will; Grant them their prayer, O rock-rimmed hill ! ~Annie Vinne Tillery, 1913
Background: Students ascend Bailey on Labor Day 2018. For more information on Bailey Mountain, visit: www.baileymountainpark.org or email baileymtn@mhu.edu. Find Bailey Mountain Park / Richard L. Hoffman Foundation on facebook!
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Point of Inspiration
Smith Farm Purchase will Ensure Continued Access to Bailey
Mars Hill University has been called “a gem in an emerald ring of hills,” and if that is true, then certainly the most iconic of these emerald hills would be Bailey Mountain. Any MHU student’s residence hall or classroom window may very well frame Bailey, who oversees their intellectual adventures and athletic battles. Yet as calm and steadying as Bailey is apt to seem, she also represents exciting recent news for those who hope to see her slopes welcoming MHU students for years to come. On December 28, 2018, the Town of Mars Hill completed purchase of an 87-acre property off Forest Street commonly known as the Smith Farm. The sale of the Smith Farm capped off a campaign among several Mars Hill alumni, residents, and benefactors begun in 2015. Owned and managed by the Town of Mars Hill, the 87-acre Smith Farm will be publicly accessible. A recreational management plan is currently under development, pending a public input period. The Smith Farm purchase is the latest in a local long-term grass roots cooperative effort to preserve the iconic Bailey Mountain from private development. The effort preserves the landscape and horizon of the town itself. And, for the average Mars Hill University student, the purchase of Smith farm ensures increased access to a substantive feature of the MHU student experience. Looking from campus, the eye follows Connor Ridge to Bailey’s summit, which is likely the route taken for the historic and notorious “initiation” hikes of bygone first year Mars Hill College students. A similar tradition may now be renewed for today’s bolder incoming students. MHU’s new President Tony Floyd led a hike this past Labor Day, and over 150 of the determined joined him to hear inspirational words from a scenic viewpoint; most continued to the summit.
By: Ryan W. Bell Bailey Mountain Project Liaison and Director of First Year Academic Success Also along Connor Ridge, the Smith property adjoins the Bailey Mountain Park, which contains the valley beyond, including the headwaters of White Oak Creek and Hamp Gap. Bailey Mountain Park is another property open to the public and is owned by the Richard L. Hoffman foundation. (The Park is accessible via a right-of-way from Phillips Valley Road off Route 213.) The approximately 200-acre Bailey Mountain Park purchase began when two parcels went up for sale in 1997 and was
completed in 2006 thanks to a sizable donation. Both efforts ensure that MHU students may continue to court discovery on the slopes of Bailey, whether it be biology students on plant walks and stream wades or gazing artists seeking inspiration. Furthermore, students connect through Bailey, in time and space–sharing the labor and stewardship of the MHU students Brad Barbee and Shay Sargent work on trail and the conquest trails on Bailey of the ascent, orienting themselves in adulthood and the region, and glimpsing the same expansive
view and the possibilities it portends.
Timeline
1940: New college seal incorporates Bailey Mountain 1996: Two parcels totaling approximately 200 acres up for sale 1998: Richard L. Hoffman Foundation begins purchase with private loan and donations 2006: $10k donation completes purchase of Bailey Mountain Park 2015: Campaign begins to purchase Smith Farm 2017: Benefit concert at Mars Hill Theatre December 2018: Smith Farm sale is closed
Scaling New Heights Scenes from the Inauguration of John Anthony Floyd November 9, 2018
Floyd is installed as President of Mars Hill University by Wayne HIggins, trustee chair, and John Omachonu, provost. 1
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(1) Tony Floyd with his daughters, Olivia and Sarah, both of whom had a part in the inauguration ceremony. (2) The Floyd family poses efore the inauguration: Sarah, Terry, Tony, and Olivia. (3) Rev. Kevin Barnette leads the invocation. (4) Dr. Robert L. Wyatt, president of Coker College, brings remarks. (5) Kyler Kee, (then) president of the MHU student body, welcomes the new president. (6) Delegates to the inauguration and (7) the MHU Board of Trustees pose with president Floyd. (In all. 24 institutions and organizations sent delegates.) (8) Floyd poses with former MHU President Dan Lunsford.