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Woodberry Forest School

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View of Walker Building from Robertson Lake in 2013

Woodberry Forest School is a private, all-male boarding school located in Woodberry Forest, Madison County, Virginia, in the United States.

2016-07-21 11 55 51 View north along U.S. Route 15 (James Madison Highway) at Pembrooke Road in Orange, Orange County, Virginia

Quotes

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  • Woodberry Forest School is a stunningly beautiful place located in the rolling Virginia Piedmont just outside the small town of Orange. The campus of imposing red brick and white-columned buildings was surrounded by green athletic fields, a working farm, and a nine-hole golf course, with a magnificent visual backdrop of the Blue Ridge Mountains in the western distance. While I was a student there, I roamed the nearby Confederate trenches, leaf-filled but still clearly visible, along the south bank of the Rapidan River, where men from Lee's Army of Northern Virginia had wintered in 1864-1865. The Confederate battle flag that hung in my dorm room during my three years at Woodberry bore witness to my love for the south and a near reverence for the soldiers in grey who manned those trenches on the Rapidan in defense of my native region.
    • Charles B. Dew, The Making of a Racist: A Southerner Reflects on Family, History, and the Slave Trade (2016), Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, hardcover, p. 20-21
  • In some ways, I did a lot of growing up during my time at Woodberry. Mandatory evening study halls, supervised by masters (as we referred to our teachers), were a major irritant and were absolutely vital to my emergence as a decent student who could aspire to making it into a decent college. We read constantly, even over the summer (I thought I would never make it through O.E. Rølvaag's Giants in the Earth), we memorized (I can still recite long passages of "Thanatopsis"), we took tests and exams (all the time, it seemed to me), we had math and lab science courses that drove me crazy, and we competed on those green, frequently muddy, athletic fields all three seasons of every year (football and winter and spring track for me).
    • Charles B. Dew, The Making of a Racist: A Southerner Reflects on Family, History, and the Slave Trade (2016), Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, hardcover, p. 21-22
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