Cave Spring established the first
public school in Floyd
County, and today boasts a school of excellence
at the Pre-K and Elementary levels.
The Georgia School for the Deaf
was founded in 1846 by O. P. Fannin with four
deaf students who met in a one-room log cabin.
When Fannin Hall was erected in 1848, the number
of students had increased to fourteen. The establishment
of this school brought new life to a helpless
and hopeless segment of our society - deaf children.
The school was closed from
1862-1867 due to the Civil War, during which
time the Confederate and Union forces used
Fannin Hall for a hospital. In 1997, the City
of Cave
Spring purchased the original Deaf
School Campus from the State of Georgia for
$178,000. In August, 1999, city offices relocated
to Fannin
Hall, and the old City Hall building was
rented to private individuals. Today the GSD
campus
on Perry Farm Road is the setting for excellent
educational preparation for deaf students
and multiple-handicapped students.