From the January-March 1984 issue of Tar Heel Homemaker
Iredell Clubs Organized in 1914
Way back in 1914, Miss Cora Bell organized three Home
Demonstration Clubs in Iredell County. Fifteen members of the Mt. Mourne
Extension Homemakers heard a history of their association at a luncheon meeting
at Julia’s Talley House in Troutman.
Annie Honeycutt, president, greeted the members and
collected the gifts for the club’s adopted daughter, Frances Connelly at
Western Carolina Center, which included a watch, pantsuit and other personal
gifts. They also planned to remember a person in the Mt. Mourne community.
After the luncheon, Stella Woodfin and Colleen Davis had the
devotions and presented corsages to the five members who are shut in and unable
to attend the meetings. They are Connie Ashley Gordon, Mrs. Fred Sherrill, Mary
Bell Caldwell and Margaret Burney.
Miss Plato Kelly presented a history of the Mt. Mourne Club,
stating that Miss Cora Bell, now deceased, won the first certificate ever
awarded to a North Carolinian for service as a neighborhood 4-H leader and then
she organized a Tomato Club for young girls, teaching them to plant and can
foods, make jellies and preserves.
In 1914, she organized three home demonstration clubs, the
first in Iredell County—Mt. Mourne, Shepherd and Linwood. Her next few summers
were spent working for the State Extension Service, assisting county agents in
organizing new clubs in other counties.
This was the beginning of the Extension Homemakers
Association.
In 1924, the first clubhouse was built in Iredell County by
the club members and their husbands.
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