The School on Red Row

By Andrea Marroquin, JIA Museum Curator

School was an important part of life for Jekyll Island’s working families. By the 1920s, the last home on Red Row had been converted into a schoolhouse for children of the African American employees of the Jekyll Island Club. On average, 10-15 pupils attended the little schoolhouse. Over the years, teachers included Professor Wilder, Katye Cash, and Anna Hill.

Anna Hill grew up on Jekyll Island. Her father was Charlie Hill, who worked as a coachman and a caretaker for the Maurice family. She lived with her parents in a special cottage built for them by the Maurices. Hill remembered that the Maurice family sometimes allowed the island’s black employees to hold parties in their stable. She said they would remove the coaches, and everyone would have a “grand time.”

When Hill was old enough to attend school, she moved to Brunswick to pursue her education and eventually went on to Atlanta for college. She returned to Jekyll Island in the 1930s to teach the island’s African American children. Hill earned about $50 per month as a teacher and worked at the Club Laundry to supplement her wages.

By this time, school was in session all year, and many of the Jekyll Island Club’s African American employees, as well as their children, attended a summer school sponsored by the Club. Lessons on the island went up to the sixth grade. After that, children attended boarding school in Brunswick. 

The Jekyll Island Schoolhouse provided a thorough education. One student remembered: “We would have to know every state, its capital, and every mountain that was in it, if there was mountains. If there was valleys in it, we would have to know that. We would have to know every river, how it flows, what sound it dumps into, where it flows into what ocean and everything. Like Georgia, we had to know Georgia from A to Z.”

When not in school, many students worked odd jobs about the island. The schoolchildren served as caddies, boat launch staff, elevator operators, and more for the millionaire members of the Jekyll Island Club.

Visit Mosaic, Jekyll Island Museum to discover more about the African American experience on Jekyll Island. A new exhibit, In the Service of Others, documents the African American community’s essential role in the development of the Jekyll Island Club. To find out more, click HERE to read In the Service of Others article in 31.81 – The Magazine of Jekyll Island.

Festivals of Speed: Boutique Display of Cars

Festivals of Speed: Boutique Display of Cars

Sunday, December 13, 10AM – 2PM  |  Riverfront Lawn

Join fellow car enthusiasts for a “boutique” gathering of cars featuring vintage and contemporary classic, exotic and American muscle cars to be displayed on the picturesque Jekyll Island Club Resort Riverfront Lawn.

The Display of Cars on Sunday, December 13th is complimentary to the public. Spectators and exhibitors are encouraged to bid on LIVE auction items, or make a donation to benefit our charitable partner, the Jekyll Island Foundation, a nonprofit organization devoted to raising funds for the conservation, preservation, and educational initiatives on Jekyll Island. Auction items include a beautiful piece of art by Thomas Arvid.

Interested in showing off your own unique vehicle? To celebrate the holiday season, Festivals of Speed has waived the $50 car registration fee for those who wish to join the fun and display their vintage or contemporary classic, exotic or American muscle cars. Award winning cars will take home fine crystal awards with the top 10 award winners also receiving a bottle of Whistle Pig whisky. Vehicles can register online HERE.

Festivals of Speed: Welcome Cocktail Reception featuring nationally known artist Thomas Arvid

Saturday, December 12, 7 – 9PM  |  Grand Dining Room

Whether participating in the Display of Cars or simply spectating, all enthusiasts are invited to a welcome cocktail reception in the historic Grand Dining Room of the Jekyll Island Club Resort to kick off the event.

Enjoy an evening with fellow motor vehicle lovers with butler-passed hors d’oeuvres, a full open bar, and plenty of conversation with friends, new and old. Tickets are $95/PP and can be purchased online HERE.

Make a weekend of it and stay at the historic Jekyll Island Club by booking a room at discounted rates under the FESTIVALS OF SPEED room block. Contact the hotel direct by calling (888) 445-3179.