|
The Fraziers saw a brighter future for Marie than their own. Their
daughter, they proudly predicted, wouldn’t have to spend countless years
breathing the linty, stifling air of the mills. She would graduate high
school and be a secretary, a humble ambition that seemed, in the context of the
Fraziers’ times and surroundings, the loftiest of dreams. Blue Mountain
girls usually got no more than a grade school education before they began
working at Linen Thread. Marie would be different—she was special, and
her parents told her so.
In 1945 the Fraziers moved from Blue Mountain to Anniston, and Marie began
7th grade at Quintard Junior High School. Anniston, though geographically
close to Blue Mountain, was socially worlds away. Anniston had its own
upper class, comprised chiefly of the owners of the various mills and factories
where Marie’s relatives had always worked. At Quintard, Marie found
herself among children of privilege, and she cultivated friendships with them.
She joined the student council and was serious about her studies, earning a
reputation for maturity and intelligence. She was pretty, too, and
well-dressed, and by the end of her 7th grade year she’d be chosen Prettiest
Girl at Quintard by the Anniston High School yearbook staff.
Her successes continued at Anniston High. Marie joined the Future
Teachers of America and the Commercial Club, an organization for girls who
planned secretarial careers. Her seriousness established her among her
peers as a girl with depth and dependability. Her looks and style made the
boys look twice, and while she enjoyed their attention, she was already spoken
for. Marie was Frank Hilley’s girl.
|