Several years ago I posted an inquiry attempting to identify the old wooden school building on the NE corner of Hollis Crossroads. I received several informative responses. Based on those responses, and conversations with my dad and older family members, I am forwarding the following speculation about the old Pleasant Grove school. In what I am advised is a page from the Cleburne County, Alabama Heritage Book, someone wrote, "The earliest documentation found for this school was in 1918." The author also states, "The old school site stood in the NW corner of the intersection of Highways 431 and 9. The new school would be on the hill of the NE corner of the said intersection, directly behind the "Rock Store (Howle & Turner #2)." I apparently lost the scanned images from which this information was transcribed, but I recall the author mentioning that the so-called new school was formed by consolidating several of the community schools from the surrounding communities. As best I can ascertain, the original wooden school building was moved at some point. Some years ago as my dad, mom and brother drove north on 431, dad turned as they drove north through Hollis Crossroads and pointed back over his left shoulder and said "I went to school right up yonder on that hill." Then, in later years I personally remember him telling me that the building that presently sits on the NE corner of Hollis Crossroads is where he went to school. Not being privy to my brother's earlier experience, I presumed he meant the building's physical location, as opposed to the building. The old wooden school building must have originally sat across the street (on the NW corner) from its present location and was moved to its present location at some point after the newer school facilities burned. That would be consistent with my brother's memory of dad's comments and would further reconcile his memory with what my dad told me. Does anyone know precisely when the old wooden school building was moved to its present location?