Page 20 - Considering College
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Looking for a college? Gruver, Texas, can teach us something. A small but remarkable community
        in Hansford County, Gruver is home to about 1,200 souls.


        The community wanted to be the county seat of Hansford County, and during the 1920s there was
        a battle between the good folks of Gruver, led by Uncle Joe Gruver, and the anxious citizens of

        Spearman, Texas, a few miles down the road. Over a period that spanned nearly two decades,
        there were battles between the communities over railroad interests, line locations, county politics
        and state politics. The governor and eventually the state legislature got involved, and it got tough

        along the way.


        At one point there was gunplay that thankfully turned into an old-fashioned fistfight, having no
        impact on the outcome but revealing a level of intensity resident in Panhandle communities—an

        American  kind  of  toughness  that  embodies  and  is  driven  by  community  aspirations.  Uncle  Joe
        Gruver lost the fight and never forgot it. He was tough, innovative and persistent with a spirit that

        represented the very best of those good folks of Gruver. They work together and worked hard,
        standing unified and proactive for community improvement and a brighter future.


        That has never changed.


           The power of community flourishes in Gruver, Texas, where a donated  parcel of land
              (410 acres) allows farmers to grow corn to help students go to college. The Gruver


                  Farm Scholarship Foundation was established in 2012 to motivate students

                   through incentives and encourage academic and extracurricular success.

        Gruver ISD, a school district of less than 500 students (a drop in the bucket compared to the state’s

        5.5 million), gets an A rating on accountability, has experienced teachers averaging over fourteen
        years of service (three years greater than the state average) and a four-year graduation rate of over

        96% (compared to the state’s 90%). Teachers’ salaries at $46,026 are low (about 15% below state
        averages). But Gruver has spit. By comparison, Houston ISD’s accountability rating is a B for its

        210,000 students, the average teacher’s salary is $54,125 at the state average and just over 80%
        graduate on time or earlier. Small can be very good. There’s no symphony or ballet, few museums

        or live theater, such as available in the great Bayou City, but Amarillo is not far away, nor is West
        Texas A&M University.


        The power of community flourishes in Gruver, Texas, where a donated parcel of land (410 acres)
        allows  farmers  to  grow  corn  to  help  students  go  to  college.  The  Gruver  Farm  Scholarship

        Foundation  was  established  in  2012  to  motivate  students  through  incentives  and  encourage
        academic and extracurricular success.
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