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ELKINS, WV AND SHENANDOAH COLLEGE


 

 

he Elkins Church had two major problems: (1) A small, sway-backed and poorly constructed church building, on a 40 x 100 foot lot, with no parking space, and (2) it was tied by tradition to a small rural church six miles away. This church gave very little financial support, yet required services twice a month. We began with the second problem. There was great demand for more rural churches in the area, so I began preaching in abandoned church buildings and school houses in the afternoon on Sundays. The next step was to employ a college student to provide more services in the rural areas, and to help with visitation.

The need for a new building was almost unanimously recognized, so in 1948 we began to raise funds for it. Another problem was location. A new flood control project made south Elkins a more desirable place to build, and in 1950 we were able to buy two lots, 50 x 250 feet, at the corner of Eleventh Street and South Davis Avenue. We broke ground in late September, on the Sunday when we had the famous "blue sun" from great forest fires in the northwest. We moved into an incomplete building in September, 1951.

Elizabeth and I were very tired and overworked. I had supervised the work on the new building, after doing most of the designing, with a few suggestions from the Board of Trustees. I spent ten hours a day on the job, starting with prayer each morning with the workmen. One day I was away, and didn't pray with them. That day the scaffold fell, and the bricklayers barely escaped injury. They were not devout men, but were superstitious enough to refuse to work after that until someone came and had prayer. Our lay leader, A. J. McQuain, filled in at this duty the day or two I had to be away after that.

Bishop David T. Gregory dedicated the new building on May 4th, 1952. Indebtedness on the building was $25,000 and the total cost, not including hundreds of hours of donated labor, was $51,000 in 1952 dollars. Today that church building could not be duplicated for less than $300,000. The debt was financed by a loan from the Bank of West Union, W. Va. on a ten-year note, but was fully paid in seven years. (Troy wrote this in 1982. Now, ten years later that church building would cost a million to build.)

In the meantime, a new charge had been created, made up of the new Wayside Church, completed in 1950, Coffman Chapel, Sully, and one or more schoolhouse appointments. Elkins Church became a station appointment. We were at Elkins for seven years, and in that time, the budget increased from $2880, in 1944-45, to $29,300 in 1951-52. On my last Sunday there, I asked about the sacrifices the people had made to make that kind of giving possible. Bro. McQuain, our lay leader, finally said, "That's just it, Preacher. We all gave more and we all had more!" In the seven years we were there, membership increased over 200.


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As early as 1950, some of the trustees of Shenandoah College and Conservatory of Music, located then at Dayton, Virginia, had approached me about accepting the presidency of that school. I was busy on the Elkins project, and gave it very little thought. When Bishop Gregory dedicated the new building. he asked that I meet with the trustees in late May, to discuss the matter further. As a result, after much agonizing prayer, I accepted the invitation to preside over what was considered by many to be a dying institution. My work there began on July 1, 1952. We had 95 students and were $97,000 in debt.

Shenandoah College
Has New President

 Rev. Troy R. Brady has been named president of SHENANDOAH COLLEGE and Conservatory of Music, Dayton, Virginia. He comes to the presidency from the active ministry, having served at Elkins, W. Va., for the past seven years. During this time the church increased 56 percent in its membership, a  new church building was dedicated this June and a  new parsonage built.
 President Brady received his B.A. degree from OTTERBEIN COLLEGE, magna cum laude, and his M.A. degree from OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY. Mrs. Brady has specialized in Children’s Work and for the past six years has been minister of the Children’s Church at Elkins. She is a graduate of BONEBRAKE SEMINARY. They have two sons,  Marion and Howard.
 President Brady is endeavoring to appeal to students of the area with these four statements:

 1. A new emphasis upon the spiritual.
 2. A new emphasis upon Christian education for    life.
 3. A new approach to college evangelism.
 4. A new vitality in relationship to the church
.

Rev. Troy R. Brady - Newest President of Shenandoah College & Conservatory of Music  

 

In early May of that next year, we faced threatening suits, and possible bankruptcy. We needed $10,000 by Monday, and it was Friday! We called a prayer meeting at the president's home, and when Monday came, we had $13,000. God had provided in the emergency, but I went to bed that night with the conviction that our solution was only temporary. We were the smallest of four colleges in a six mile radius, and the only junior college. I lay in deep and earnest prayer until three a.m., when sleep finally came. I awakened promptly at seven o'clock, and the answer had come in my sleep! Out of a clear sky with no previous thought, the solution was there! Move the College to Winchester, Va., 67 miles northeast. It was the largest area in Virginia without a college. Nobody had ever thought of such a move until that early morning revelation to me.

I called Senator Harry Byrd, Sr. in Washington, D. C. and got an appointment to see him the next day at 11:00 a. m. We prepared a brief brochure, and Elizabeth and I went to Washington. With the Senator's blessing, we went to Winchester, and after contacting our pastor there, the Rev. Carl Hiser, then went to see Harry Byrd, Jr. and one other business man. By five o'clock, we had a meeting with 12 other leaders of the town, and a liaison person was appointed to work with us and the Chamber of Commerce.


To All Shenandoah friends . . . .

SHENANDOAH'S NEW PRESIDENT

Rev. Troy R. Brady - Newest President of Shenandoah College & Conservatory of Music

    Shenandoah takes pride in presenting to you our new president, the Rev. Mr. Brady who was appointed at a meeting of the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees, on .June 10, 1952, upon the resignation of Dr. L. P. Hill. to the office of President of Shenandoah College and Shenandoah Conservatory of Music.

   Mr. Brady is a native of West Virginia and a member of West Virginia Conference of the Evangelical United Brethren Church. He comes to the presidency from the active ministry, having served as pastor in Elkins, West Virginia, for the past seven years.

    During his Elkins pastorate, a new church building and new parsonage were built. Membership in the church there increased 56%  under Mr. Brady's leadership.

     Mr. Brady flax also served churches at Cairo, Union, and Freemansburg in the West Virginia Conference, and at Harrisburg, Ohio. He was ordained in 1934, at Charleston, West Virginia, by Bishop G. D. Batdorf, following his completion of work in the Diploma School at Bonebrake Theological Seminary, Dayton, Ohio.

    Otterbein College granted Mr. Brady the B. A. Degree in 1945, with Magna Cum Laude. In the same year, he received the M. A. Degree in Political Science from Ohio State University. The subject of his thesis was "The International Control of Freedom of Worship."

    The new President is a member of Pi Sigma Alpha, Omicron Chapter

(national political science honorary fraternity).

    Mrs. Brady is the former Elizabeth Thrash, of Parkersburg, West Virginia. She has also completed work at Bonebrake Theological Seminary, attending with Mr. Brady. She has specialized in Children's Work in the local church, and has for six years been minister of the Children's Church at Elkins.

    The Bradys have two children, Marion, of Akron, Ohio, and Howard at home.


 

A Message From The President:

Dear Friend of Shenandoah:

 

I hope that you are asking questions about the new president of your school! "What does he have to say?" "What are his purposes and policies?" Here are some of the answers:

  •   "SOMETHING OLD"

Shenandoah has honored traditions. Seventy-seven years of history could not help but produce them. I am determined that these traditions shall be respected.

Shenandoah has good scholastic standards. Our Conservatory graduates are in demand. Our Junior College is accredited, and our graduates acceptable to other schools. The good must be made better here!

Shenandoah is a church-related college. Her most glorious achievements have been in the consciousness of this relationship. She must never become "a distant relative" of the church!

Shenandoah has moral standards. Some of them are listed in the catalog. These, and others determined by the church and the trustees are binding upon the administration, the faculty, and the student body. We intend to stand by the rules!

  • "SOMETHING NEW"

1.  A new emphasis upon the spiritual. A right relationship to God is imperative to successful living. We believe that right relationship can only be accomplished by an experiential, practical application of faith.

2.   A new emphasis upon Christian education for life. A college graduate should be especially valuable as a layman in the local church. The stewardship of time, abilities and possessions is especially- important here. By utilizing present courses, or by introducing. new ones, Shenandoah is now committed to producing good churchmen.

3.  A new approach to college evangelism. In this case, it will be new because it returns to the old. “Religious Emphasis Week” will be expanded to a full two week, evangelistic effort, with personal evangelism, counseling on spiritual problems, and campus-wide open meetings. Sane, competent and well-trained workers will be secured.

4.  A new vitality: In her relationship to the Virginia Conference, to the local churches, in the financial problems, in educational advance in every proper field, we are committed to give new life and energy to Shenandoah. Our new purpose is to move out of convalescence and in to health.

5.   Some new slogans:

 

"Shenandoah-mortal enemy of intellectual bigotry."

"Shenandoah-where dependable faith and honest scholarship are inseparable."

"Shenandoah-God's mountain-top in the valley."

                May everyone who knows our school soon be able to say "you can depend on Shenandoah!"

 

Sincerely,

TROY R. BRADY

President


 

There was a problem for Winchester. They had just completed a new hospital, and were involved in paying for it, but in February, 1955, a letter from the liaison man informed us that they were ready to consider our cause. They were having a banquet at the George Washington Hotel on March 17th, inviting the school representatives to entertain with musicians from the Conservatory, and I was to speak to the group, explaining what the school could offer the city, and what the city could do for the school. A vote at the close of the meeting was unanimous to support the move. The city would donate the new site for the campus, 45 acres, and raise $350,000 for the first building. After some bitter opposition from a few members of the Virginia Conference, that body finally voted on June 28, 1956, to relocate the College in Winchester.


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My personal health had deteriorated under the heavy load I was carrying, and Elizabeth, who had always felt that we should not be out of the pastorate, was urging me to resign. Anticipating this, we followed an urge to find a place in the Shenandoah Valley in which to retire. I had a personal longing to find a place in Singers Glen. We asked the Rev. Wm. Wolfe, the pastor in that village, to help us find a place. The church there had, in buying adjoining houses and lots for expansion, acquired 3.15 Acres of land on the southeast side of the community, and a house that had to be moved so the church could have more parking.

(We bought the land for $2000 and the house, which had been the first schoolhouse in "The Glen," for $500. We had the house moved to the 3.15 acres for $900 and began a long labor of love in remodeling and upgrading the house, which was built in 1882. The house is now a very comfortable and attractive home, at current (1982) prices, worth at least $45,000. (Added: We sold it for $65,000 in 1989. We had sold four lots earlier from the original three plus acres. E.T.B.)

I resigned as president, effective July 1, 1956, just four years to he day from the time I began my term. I was in the hospital during the regular session of Virginia Conference in early September. Forrest Racey, who had been business manager, was elected president in my place. He led in moving the college to the new location in 1960.

 

Dedication ceremony of the new Winchester location of Shenandoah University

(Source: "The Impossible Task" by James Richard Wilkins, Sr.)

Shenandoah University Dedication Ceremony of the new buildings in Winchester - 1960

October 16, 1960  - SHENANDOAH COLLEGE DEDICATION - Among those participating in the dedication ceremony of the Armstrong and Gregory Buildings at Shenandoah College yesterday afternoon were from left to right:

Bishop J. Gordon Howard; Rev. Troy Brady, former president of Shenandoah, now in Bradenton, Fla., Major James R. Wilkins; Frank R. Armstrong; Mrs. Thelma Gregory Jackson; Rev. Howard Lee Fulk of Martinsburg; and Rev. Forrest S. Racey, president of Shenandoah College.


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In the meantime, Elizabeth had not been idle. She completed her junior college studies at Shenandoah, and I personally awarded her diploma in early June, 1953. After two years at Madison College (now James Madison University) she received her B. S. in Education, and for two years, 1955-57, taught the fourth grade at W. H. Keister School in Harrisonburg. Her income kept us until January 1st, 1957, when I started as supply pastor at Waynesboro, Va., after the Rev. Glovier retired with a heart attack. The church unanimously asked for my return, but the superintendent, angered because I had successfully led in the decision to relocate the college, refused to even consider it. He had wanted to close the school altogether.

 

Letter of appreciation from  Wilton B. Thomas, Secretary - Blairton - Greensburg EUB Churches / Martinsburg District



Letter Below from Wm. O. Cooley concerning Shenandoah University (also mentions James R. Wilkes, Sr. , author of "The Impossible Task", which is the history of Shenandoah University from 1875 to 1995.

(I don't think a copy of this letter was printed in "Pop Troy's Anthology". I found the original letter inserted in Mother Brady's copy of the book that she gave me during my visit in 12/2001. RmB)


April 28, 1958  Letter from Wm. O. Cooley of Wm. O. Cooley & Son Builders and Developers, Suite 205, 5301 Wisconsin Ave. NW, Washington 15, DC - Telephone: EMerson 3-7295 (Dear Mr. Brady, I was delighted to receive such a nice, wholesome, and friendly letter from you. First, I want to assure you that I will always give you first place among all those who helped out in the move of the college from Dayton to Winchester. You and your efforts in behalf of the college will be remembered long after your oppponents and detractors have been forgotten. As you know Jim Wilkins has been a tower of strength in helping solve this problem, and he never fails togive you the credit for initiating the move and says you have eraned the everlasting gratitutde of all who are friends of the institution. Now that I have your address I shall keep you up to date on the latest developments. I am sure you know that Winchester has gone over the top on its financial campaign. The conference has hired Rev. Robert Bartlett to conduct a campaign to raise at least $250,000.00 to assure enough money to complete the music building and the academic building. The camppaign is going well. We have some real assurance that we can secure a government loan to build, equip and furnish two dormitories with dining facilities. Plans for these 4 buildings are now on the drawing board and will soon be ready for bids. We are commited to be in Winchester foro the 1959 Fall term -- and we believe with God's help, we will succeed. Thank you and Mrs. Brady for your kind and friendly invitation to visit you in your home in Bradenton. I hope I can accept. I have spent some time on your beloved west coast over the past ten years and I love it. I want to congratulate you and the people of Bradenton for making such a fine start toward establishing such a nice church in a thriving city. May all your dreams become a reality. Last, but not least, I am glad you are fully restored to health. May you and Mrs, Brady continue to enjoy the best of everything. When you see Mr. Brill, be sure to tell him that we can see much good in what he did for the school those two trying years he was with us. I am in good health. Cordially Yours, Wm. O. Cooley

 


Letter from Jane Pittman, Asst. Vice President for Development - Shenandoah University

Letter from Jane Pittman, Asst. Vice President of Development at Shenandoah University regarding the book written by James R. Wilkins, "The Impossible Task"

 

 

 


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