11-01-2013 Sandy Springs Reporter

Page 4

COMMUNITY

PTO president: Heards Ferry Elementary move unavoidable CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 Dean told constituents that she appredent of operations, said the school sysciated their input as the school system tem has made an offer on property at considered sites for the new school. 6151 Powers Ferry Road, just south of There were some contentious public I-285. The building is owned by KBS meetings about the move held in SanStrategic Opportunity REIT. dy Springs. The new school would relocate “I appreciate Heards Ferry from the patience and its current location support extended adjacent to Riverduring the many “We’ve really worked wood International months it has taken hard to find the most Charter School. to select this school viable option out there.” site,” Dean said. “I Burke said Fulton Counknow you share my ty Schools offiexcitement that we – PATRICK BURKE cials have worked remain on schedule DEPUTY SUPERINTENDENT closely with Santo open this new OF OPERATIONS dy Springs to find school for students a viable site, and to by August 2015. As make the site as acwe begin construccessible as possible to students. tion, which should be in early 2014, “We’ve really worked hard to find I will be in touch to share more inforthe most viable option out there,” mation, and hope you may be a part of Burke said. our groundbreaking celebration.” Under the current plan, the school’s Heerin said there will be benefits to contractor would demolish the sixthe new location, even though it won’t story building at the site and replace it be as accessible to pedestrians as the with a new, three-story building. current Heards Ferry location. The new school is scheduled to “I think they’ll put together a nice open sometime in 2015, Burke said. building,” she said. “Traffic flow will Fulton County BOE member Gail better.”

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NOV. 1 – NOV. 14, 2013 | www.ReporterNewspapers.net

The family gathers for Judge John Heard’s birthday.

Judge Heard: Fighter, farmer, father BY DAN WHISENHUNT

danwhisenhunt@reporternewspapers.net

The man whose family cemetery is the focus of a lawsuit lived a long, prolific life, according to a Georgia researcher. Barry Colbaugh wrote an article about Judge John Heard in October 2012 for The Georgia Confederate, the official newsletter of the Georgia Division of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. Heard was a Confederate Veteran and a prominent community figure. Heard served as a local judge in the 1900s, and his bloodline also connects him to other political figures in Georgia history. He is believed to be a descendant of Stephen Heard, who was governor of Georgia in 1778, according to Colbaugh. One of John Heard’s descendants, Paul Heard, made an unsuccessful run for governor in 1994, according to Paul Heard’s obituary. According to Colbaugh’s article, as well as information posted on genealogical websites, Heard wasn’t just another rank and file soldier in the Confederate Army. He also witnessed history. Heard was in his early 30s when he surrendered with Gen. Robert E. Lee at Appomattox Court House in Virginia in 1865, according to the article. He walked barefoot from Virginia to his

family farm in Georgia, his hands ruined from injuries sustained during the war. The location of the Heard Cemetery is all that remains of the farm. According to Colbaugh, when Heard returned, he discovered the farm was destroyed and the livestock had been stolen. Heard rebuilt and grew a successful crop that year. He also took over the ferry that bears his name from John Isom, who had been Heard’s commander in Company B of the 9th Battalion, Georgia Artillery. In addition to being a judge, Heard held large family reunions at the farm each year to celebrate his birthday. According to court records, in 1900, he deeded the 1 acre that would become the family cemetery, the property that is the subject of a recent lawsuit. He was said to have told his family members that he would like to “sleep by the banks of a beautiful river one day,” according to Colbaugh’s article. Heard married twice. He married Abigail Isom, who died in 1882, and then married Athelena Dickerson, who died in 1947. Heard fathered a total of 23 children, 13 of which survived. He died in 1931 at the age of 95. SS


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