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Celeste School History

Celeste School History

HOW  IT ALL STARTED 
   Homes and businesses sprung up in the open prairie on the east side of the M. K.& T Railroad when the plans for the Santa Fe Railroad crossing became definite and was named Bradbury by D.H. Patterson.
   Meanwhile, on the west side, Maison Wolfe bought the right-of-way for the Santa Fe Railroad. Lots were laid out and sold, and this new location was named Celeste after a railroad official's daughter.

OLD SCHOOL DAYS
   In 1887, the first year of Celeste as a town, a school community was organized within an area of about seven square miles. The first school was located in the south part of town near the Union Gin, approximately where East Sweeney and Milton Streets are now. Outgrown in eight years, a new brick building was erected where the school is currently located.
   It changed its name to Hawthorn College but those days were short-lived: one of the three dormitories burned and attendance was such that they couldn't justify rebuilding it.
   In 1899, the school became known as the Elmwood Institute for the next four years. After Mr. J.C. Pyle came to town it was renamed yet again: Celeste High School.
   A fire claimed the 18-year-old school in 1913 but spared the large sycamore planted on the right side of the grounds by the Hawthorn graduating class of 1897. The school was again rebuilt, with a new building added ten years later in the summer of 1923 to accommodate the growing student body.

Source: From Tall Grass to High Cotton, 1999, Wolfe City Chamber of Commerce

AUDIE MURPHY
   Audie Murphy, the most decorated soldier in World War II, was born four and a half miles south of Celeste on June 20, 1924, the sixth of nine children of tenant farmers Emmett and Josie Killian Murphy. Although they lived on various farms in the area, Audie Murphy attended school in their "hometown" of Celeste until he had to quit school after the eighth grade to help support the family. 

   On his eighteenth birthday, after being rejected by the Marines because of his size (5'7", 130 pounds), he enlisted in the Army while working in Greenville.
   For unusual courage and bravery, he received 24 decorations including the Congressional Medal of Honor, The French Legion of Honor, Chevalier, The distinguished Service Cross and a Silver Star.
   After the war, he became a successful actor, with perhaps his most memorable role as himself in the autobiographical film, "To Hell and Back".
   Following his untimely death in a plane crash in Virginia, May 28, 1971, the United States Congress added another tribute: the dedication of a Veteran's hospital in San Antonio.
   Audie Murphy's marker in Celeste is located near 308 Highway 69 South in front of a lighted garden kept by Mr. And Mrs. Charles Combs. Surrounded by a landscaped park bench, three flagpoles proudly display the US, Texas, and Celeste Blue Devil flags.

Built in 1913 after a fire claimed its predecessor, this Celeste High School - which faced South 7th Street - also succumbed to the same fate in 1955. This picture was taken from a 1930 graduation invitation.

 


Audie Murphy, the most decorated soldier in World War II, was born four and a half miles south of Celeste on June 20, 1924, the sixth of nine children of tenant farmers Emmett and Josie Killian Murphy.