Members of the South Lake NJROTC present the ceremonial folded flag to Clermont Middle School principal Scott Voytko, as school board member Marc Dodd looks on

Article and Pictures by Linda Charlton
Video by Michelle Delaney
Lake County Schools tribute video included

Tuesday was Clermont Middle School Day within the Lake County School District. The proclamation and accompanying ceremony signaled the end of an era and the beginning of a new one.

The ceremonies started at 8:30 am in the Middle School auditorium and ended outside at the flagpole. Principal Scott Voytko was Master of Ceremony.

Band Director Allen J. Venezio conducts his group Tuesday morning in the Clermont Middle School auditorium

The Clermont Middle band and chorus gave their first and only performance of the year. The South Lake High Navy Junior ROTC provided the color guard and (later) the flag-folding. Superintendent Diane Kornegay read the Middle School proclamation. A trio of dignitaries: County Commissioner Sean Parks, Clermont Mayor Tim Murry, and School Board Member Marc Dodd gave their remarks.

Members of the South Lake High Navy Junior ROTC Honor Guard are joined by sponsor Lt.colonel John Pylant (Marine Corps, retired) to fold the U.S. flag, following its ceremonial last-time lowering at Clermont Middle School on Tuesday morning
Members of the South Lake High NJROTC honor guard lowering the flag for the last time at the Clermont Middle School.

Out at the flagpole, the Florida and United States flags, in that order, were taken down and ceremonially folded, then presented to school principal Voytko. Voytko reports the flags will be placed in storage, then they will be framed and put on display in the new school.

Aurelia Cole’s husband and children were on hand Tuesday to remember. From the left are Devon Cole, Jr. Devon Cole and Danielle Cole-Green

The new K-8 Aurelia M. Cole Academy is planned to open in 2023 on the site of the soon-to-be-demolished Clermont Middle School. Aurelia Cole died in 2018. She was a veteran educator, former dean of students at Clermont High, assistant principal of Clermont Middle, and achieved groundbreaker status when she became the first African-American high school principal in Lake County, post-integration when she became principal of East Ridge High. Her connection to Clermont High and Clermont Middle are particularly appropriate to the new school name, as the Clermont Middle campus was formerly the home of Clermont High.

The history of Clermont Middle dates back to 1969. The history of Clermont High dates back to 1915. And the speakers all reflected on the history of the school and campus.

Commissioner Parks speculated as to “how many good future citizens  emerged from Clermont Middle, how many scientists, builders, business owners, tradesmen and women, doctors, police, firemen, engineers, teachers.” He answered his own question, saying that “judging by the people I know, and the people I see, I can say with great confidence, Clermont Middle School was a true gem for our community.”

Clermont Mayor Tim Murry

Mayor Murry is a graduate of Clermont High, and described Tuesday’s ceremonies as “bitter-sweet.” In a tribute to Cole, Murry remarked that “as one that knew and grew up with Aurelia, the school board’s decision to name the new K-8 campus Aurelia M. Cole Academy placed high expectations and goals on the school and students before it’s built. I am very confident that those expectations and goals will be achieved as the Academy prepares our future leaders.

 

Marc Dodd, Lake County School Board

Marc Dodd spoke of citizens reaching out to him and giving him a true understanding of just how much the old Clermont High (and by extension, Clermont Middle) has meant to so many in the community, and he assured listeners that there will be pieces of the old school(s) to hold on to, even on the new campus.

Former Clermont mayor Hal Turville was one of several citizens whose remarks on the school closing were presented as part of a tribute video. He said, in part, that “I consider myself blessed to have been a part of small-town Clermont, both while I was a student and afterward. It takes a village! The school system was the clear center of activity.”

Clermont Middle, as an institution, was born with the integration of public schools in Clermont. The schools were integrated with the ’68-’69 school year. Before that local students who were black attended the Lincoln Park School, which was then a 12-year school.

Clermont High, just blocks away, was a 6-year school. That campus had been initially completed in 1955, with several additions following in the first few years. Mayor Murry remembers the transition from segregation to integration well, as he was a student at the Lincoln Park School. His first year of high school was the first year of integration at Clermont High — which remained a 6-year school for one more year. Then Clermont Junior High opened in what had been the Lincoln Park School, and Clermont High went from a 6-year school to a 4-year school.

After Clermont High and Groveland High consolidated into South Lake High (first school year, ’93-’94), the old Clermont High was remodeled to accommodate the students at Clermont Junior. The remodel took longer than anticipated and the school, now called Clermont Middle School, was officially opened to students on April 17, 1995, according to the Clermont Middle School Day proclamation. The first Middle School mascots were the warriors, A few years later they became the falcons, which is what they are today, and for one more day after that. Then the demolition will begin — but not entirely. The auditorium will be extensively remodeled and the athletic field will be re-designed.

Marc Dodd said that there will be an auction, so …. if anybody wants a row of seats from the old Clermont auditorium, or maybe some lockers from the halls, now is the time to make plans.
View the video of CMS Closing Ceremony prepared by the SOUTH LAKE TABLET

https://fb.watch/5UDJ8395LW/

View the video presented by Lake County Schools.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GoYNFY9MjXQ

FROM THE LAST CLERMONT HIGH SCHOOL YEARBOOK