HOPE – The transition of integration from H.C. Yerger High School to Hope High School after 1969 created a void for the alumni of the traditionally Black YHS. That void has been filled by the Yerger Alumni Association biennial Yerger High School Reunion.\r\n
\r\n“Honoring Our Heritage: Celebrating 50 Years of Closure” was the theme for the July 3-6 gathering which brought more than 200 Yerger alumni back to Hope to reflect upon the 50 years since the Class of 1969 was the final class to graduate in a Yerger Tiger commencement.\r\n
\r\nIt is intrinsic to the community that has formed around the Yerger legacy that for each alumnus they are “Once a Yerger Tiger, Always a Yerger Tiger.”\r\n
\r\n“The Yerger Reunion began in 1969 with the closing of Yerger High School; and, it was originally held every five years, and presently is held every two years,” said former Hope Public Schools Superintendent Kenneth Muldrew, who serves as chair of the Yerger/Rutherford Scholarship Committee. “Vander Lloyd organized it, and was the first Henry Clay Yerger Alumni Committee president.”\r\n
\r\nBishop Johnie L. Jones, Yerger Alumni Association vice president and pastor of Providence Missionary Baptist Church – Full Gospel, presided this year in place of Yerger Alumni Association President Mary Allen White, who was ill during the celebration.\r\n
\r\nThe importance of the Yerger legacy continues to be felt in each of the events that mark the reunion, as noted in three particular programs, the Welcome Program, the Yerger Reunion Parade, and the Yerger Reunion Banquet.\r\n
\r\nThe singing of the Black National Anthem at the outset of the welcoming ceremony set the tone for recognition of the accomplishments and memory of the Yerger alumni as Bishop Jones offered the invocation to bring the reunion to order in the memory of pioneer educator and YHS namesake Dr. Henry C. Yerger.\r\n
\r\n“We are here today to celebrate a great school that brought us here,” Jones said.\r\n
\r\nPastor Alvin Hunter welcomed the alumni to Lonoke Baptist Church as part of a people of community growing up in Hope.\r\n
\r\n“We need to go back to the concept that it takes a village to raise a child,” Rev. Hunter said.\r\n
\r\nHe said the parents, teachers, neighbors and friends represented in the lives of Yerger alumni understood community and the value of the education afforded Black children at the Yerger school complex on Henry C. Yerger Street.\r\n
\r\n“Doctor Yerger had a national community to train teachers,” Hunter said. “He had a legacy that should be remembered and never die.”\r\n
\r\nHope Public Schools Superintendent Dr. Bobby Hart acknowledged that legacy for Hope, Hempstead County, and beyond.\r\n
\r\n“I know that we have come a long way; but, I know we have a long way to go,” Dr. Hart said.\r\n
\r\nHe said the efforts of the Yerger Alumni Association and the volunteers who maintained its legacy brought back to Hope the best that Yerger represented.\r\n
\r\n“We want to continue to bring the best for the children of Hope and their education,” Hart said.\r\n
\r\nHope Mayor Steve Montgomery acknowledged the foundation which YHS laid for Hope.\r\n
\r\n“That foundation has grown and helped our community greatly,” Montgomery noted.\r\n
\r\nCounty Judge Jerry Crane reminded the assembly that their pride in being a Yerger Tiger was warranted.\r\n
\r\n“Share that with your grandkids and the students, about where you have been,” Crane said. “Sometimes, we need to go backward to go forward.”\r\n
\r\nDr. Lynda Phillips Johnson, representing the Class of 1969, gave the acceptance, recalling that she is consistently asked what accounts for the success of so many Yerger students.\r\n
\r\n“What is it about Hope?” Dr. Johnson posed. “Is it in the water?”\r\n
\r\nJohnson said the secret lies in an education system founded upon principles which are largely ignored in American society today.\r\n
\r\n“The education system was not designed to be the mother, the church, or the welfare system,” she said. “It was designed to educate.”\r\n
\r\nMemorials were announced by Ala Mae Flenory, Yerger Alumni Association secretary.\r\n
\r\nThe ceremony was closed with the singing of the Yerger High School Alma Mater.\r\n
\r\nDespite rainy conditions, Thursday, July 4, was highlighted by the reunion parade, which assembled some two dozen units at the Yerger Middle School campus and traveled down Sixth Street, turning onto South Elm Street to proceed into downtown Hope.\r\n
\r\nNumerous of the graduating classes from YHS were represented with decorated cars, floats, and motorcycle units. The parade has been a staple of the celebration since the outset of the reunion gatherings, according to Muldrew.\r\n
\r\n“The parade has been, and is, a tradition of the reunion activities since 1969,” he said.\r\n
\r\nNoted Little Rock attorney and commentator Simmons S. Smith keynoted the Friday night reunion banquet at Hempstead Hall.\r\n
\r\nA native of Arkadelphia, Smith attended the Yerger schools at Shover Street Elementary and Yerger High School through the ninth grade, graduating from Hope High School. He attended Henderson State University in Arkadalphia before graduating from the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville with a bachelor’s degree in political science in 1972.\r\n
\r\nSmith received a Master of Public Administration degree from UA-Fayetteville in 1973, and earned his Juris Doctor from the Washington University School of Law in St. Louis, Mo., in 1976.\r\n
\r\nHe entered professional life managing the family business, Smith’s Dairy Diner in Arkadelphia, in 1969 before becoming administrative aide to the city manager of Texarkana, Ar., in 1972, and administrative aide to the city manager of Little Rock in 1973.\r\n
\r\nSmith was admitted to the practice of law in 1976, and served as a Reginald Huber Smith Fellow for Lansing Legal Services in Lansing, Mich., until returning to Arkansas to become managing attorney for Central Arkansas Legal Services in Hot Springs, serving Garland, Hot Spring and Clark counties.\r\n
\r\nSmith has been in private legal practice in Little Rock since 1981. He is a former radio host of “Black Thought,” is host of The Simmons S. Smith Show on Little Rock Channel 16; and, he is publisher of Arkansas Black Pages in print and online.\r\n
\r\nBlack entrepreneur honors were announced at the banquet recognizing Hazel Simpson, Helen Davis, and JoAnn Johnson, all of Hope, and Dr. Lynda Phillips Johnson, John Jerry Mauldin, Joyce Meggerson-Moore, and Ronald Stuart.\r\n
\r\nHope High School 2019 graduating senior Christian Lowe was also recognized as the recipient of the annual Yerger/Rutherford Scholarship, which honors the legacy of Dr. Yerger and Will V. Rutherford, the last principal at Yerger High School.\r\n