CityView Magazine

April 2022

CityView Magazine - Fayetteville, NC

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56 April 2022 I n 1920, Fayetteville boasted one of the largest music schools in eastern North Carolina. is school, known as e Fayetteville Conservatory of Music, occupied the Kyle House at 234 Green St. In addition to having three large studios containing grand and upright pianos, there was also a spacious dining room for the on-campus students who lived in the two houses that served as dormitories near the school. e faculty included, among others, Charlotte Ruegger, director and professor of violin and theoretical work; Edward Gleason, professor of piano, organ and analysis; and Mrs. George W. Florence, matron. Another popular school was e Fayetteville School of Music founded in 1922 by Max W. Ast of Vienna, Austria. In June 1925, Mabelle New Williams, having served as director and manager for one year, purchased the school and incorporated it under the laws of North Carolina, securing at the same time the support of a board of directors. Under her management, the school grew steadily, increasing its enrollment of students, including professionals, amateurs, special students and children as young as 6. e school occupied the former Latta-ornton home and served, during the 1920s, as a center of musical culture for residents of Fayetteville. Students and teachers from these prestigious schools of music bought their supplies from e Gorham Book and Music Store on the ground floor of the LaFayette Hotel and also from McFadyen Music Store at 118 Hay St. From the 1940s through the 1950s, music students and their teachers bought their supplies from Colonial Music Store at 416 Hay St. near the Prince Charles Hotel. World-famous composer Leroy Anderson, who was the director of the Main Post Officer's Club at Fort Bragg, oen bought his manuscript paper for songs he was composing from this popular music store owned and operated by Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Padgett. FAYETTEVILLE HISTORY Fayetteville music schools in the early 1900s BY WEEKS PARKER We hope you enjoy this recurring feature by history buff Weeks Parker, who owns an impressive collection of local memorabilia and photos that he has agreed to share with CityView readers. A former Presbyterian Ju- nior College Band Director, Parker is the author of 12 books on a variety of subjects including "Fayetteville, North Carolina: A Pictorial History." The Fayetteville Conservatory of Music, which was in the Kyle House at 234 Green St., was one of the largest music schools in eastern North Carolina in the 1920s. From the 1940s through the 1950s, music students and their teachers bought their supplies from Colonial Music Store at 416 Hay St. near the Prince Charles Hotel.

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