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Community_news
100!
Louise Morgan celebrates landmark birthday in style
The Paper’s Editor Emeritus, Bill Poteat, visits with his friend
Louise Morgan at her 100th birthday celebration on Wednesday in
Valdese.
CALVIN ACUFF / FOR THE PAPER
Louise Morgan celebrated a milestone that few hope to attain on Wednesday afternoon — her 100th birthday.
Born on Jan. 20, 1926, in Burke County, she has lived through the Great Depression, World War II, and every other chapter of American history occurring over the last 10 decades.
Louise’s milestone birthday was celebrated with a gathering of several dozen family and friends at the Teachers’ Cottage of the Old Rock School in downtown Valdese.
Louise’s partner for much of her life’s journey was her husband, Ernest M. Morgan, who died in 2008.
She and Ernie, as she called him, spent more than two decades teaching in schools for the children of U.S. military personnel in Morocco, Germany, and Spain.
Louise harkened back to those years at her party when she told me, “Americans are so very spoiled. They simply do not know what real poverty and hardship are all about.”
She and Ernie’s only son, the late Ernest W. Morgan, taught in the Burke County Public Schools for more than 20 years, with most of that time spent at Morganton Junior High.
I first met Louise in the spring of 1980 when I was a young whippersnapper covering politics and county government for The News Herald. Her husband was running for county commissioner and our paths crossed frequently at campaign events.
When Ernie was elected to a 4-year term on the commissioners, I saw her even more, and she graciously invited my first wife and me to dinner at their comfortable home at the base of Table Rock several times.
Louise in 1980 was much as Louise is in 2026 — feisty, opinionated, and with an absolutely warm nature and loving heart.
As she looked around the crowded room at all those who attended her birthday celebration, she exclaimed, “I can’t believe you all are here. You mean the world to me!”
After blowing out the candles on not one, but two birthday cakes, she settled back in her wheelchair like a queen on her throne as each friend and relative came by for a hug and words of wisdom.
Noting that not many folks make it to 100, I asked Louise what recommendation she could offer to the rest of us.
Without hesitation she said, “Keep your mind sharp. You gotta exercise your brain.”
And, as she pushes past 100 into her second century, Louise said she intends to do just that.
“You’ve got to think,” she said. “You’ve just got to keep thinking.”
— BP
Bill Poteat is editor emeritus. He may be reached at 828-445-8595 orbill@thepaper.media.
Community_news
J. Iverson Riddle Developmental Center in Morganton seeks Valentine’s Day cards for residents
The J. Iverson Riddle Developmental Center is inviting Burke County residents, schools and businesses to send Valentine’s Day cards to help mark the holiday for people who live at the state-operated facility.
The center’s Volunteer Services Department will accept cards through Feb. 10, 2026, and distribute them to residents on Valentine’s Day. Organizers said residents welcome handmade valentines, store-bought cards, hand-drawn designs and coloring sheets.
The community response has grown in recent years. JIRDC said it received more than 11,000 cards last year, which the center called a sign of ongoing community support for residents.
To help ensure resident safety, the center is asking people to sign their cards and to avoid including candy, small items glued to cards, or anything placed inside the cards.
Cards may be hand-delivered to a drop box outside the JIRDC Administration Building at 300 Enola Road, Morganton, or mailed to:
JIRDC, Attn: Volunteer Services
300 Enola Road
Morganton, NC 28655
For businesses or schools interested in participating, JIRDC said staff can arrange a pickup time. To schedule pickup, contact Alicia Lorenzo Wilson, director of volunteer services, at 828-608-6212.
J. Iverson Riddle Developmental Center is a state-operated facility within the N.C. Department of Health and Human Services that serves people with intellectual disabilities and functions as the state developmental center for North Carolina’s western region.
Allen VanNoppen is the publisher. He may be reached at 828-445-8595 orallen@thepaper.media.
As the United States approaches its 250th anniversary in 2026, the North Carolina Judicial Branch is launching a new public education campaign highlighting the state’s legal history and the rights that shaped the nation’s founding.
The effort, called Celebration 250, points to two milestones: the nation’s semiquincentennial on July 4, 2026, and North Carolina’s commemoration later this year tied to the state constitution.
Judicial officials said the campaign is focused on the people, places, and events that influenced North Carolina’s legal system and the founding-era principles commonly associated with life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
As part of the launch, the court system has published a Celebration 250 webpage on NCCourts.gov that includes a message from Chief Justice Paul Newby, a historical timeline and civic education materials. The site also points the public to a speakers bureau available to schools and community groups through the Judicial Branch’s civics education program.
“The North Carolina Judicial Branch has been given the solemn and sacred task to help protect life, liberty, and property,” Newby said in the campaign message.
Residents can learn more through the Judicial Branch website at NCCourts.gov.
— AVN
Allen VanNoppen is the publisher. He may be reached at 828-445-8595 orallen@thepaper.media.
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