Not many years since there was a section of this county known as “Shakerag,” and the community composing it well and truly represented the name. The homes were small and scattering, and nowhere could anything be found resembling prosperity, in fact about the only business which thrived in that section was down on the branch, purposely out of sight, no roads to speak of, and churches and school houses few and far between. But what a revelation today! Last Sunday we drove through that section and what an improvement greeted us all along the way. The top soil road had been completed to the Granville county line, and it is one of the prettiest roads we have ever traveled over. New homes, the bungalow style, going up, new store buildings and of course the filling stations. Just as you approach Surl, one known as the capital of Shakerag, we find our friend, Mr. W.A. Eanes, has erected a large, well-apportioned store house, with a bungalow hard by which would be a credit to our little city, all neatly painted and everything giving tone to prosperity. Just beyond, some one has erected another bungalow which is equally as attractive safe for lack of paint, and so it is from there on, new bungalows, large and convenient stables, everything denying the cry of hard times.
And what did it? Good roads. Now let those good people get together and build a high school building to take care of the boys and girls and there will be no more prosperous section in the County than what was looked down upon only a few years since, and considered the dark corner.
From the front page of the Roxboro Courier, March 25, 1925
newspapers.digitalnc.org/lccn/sn92073208/1925-03-25/ed-1/seq-1/