Buchanan Elementary set to replace original sign
Thousands of students have attended Buchanan Elementary School since it opened in 1976.
One thing each one of them have in common is passing by the original Buchanan marquee that has been sitting alongside Manchester Highway.
After 45 years, the well-worn sign soon will be replaced with a new LED sign.
Funding for the project, which was unanimously approved by the Rutherford County School Board in August, will include $20,000 from Wilson Bank & Trust along with another $5,000 from the Buchanan Elementary parent teacher organization.
When Director of Schools Bill Spurlock asked, “So, it is original,” principal Ashley Witt replied, “That is the best to my knowledge. I cannot find any records to give me any (information) other than that.”
Witt later said, “It’s really aged.”
The sign needed repairs following a storm in spring 2000 when the plexiglass windows, which are hinged across the top of the sign, were ripped open by the wind and the school lost a lot of lettering from the message they had been displaying.
The damage was repaired, but each storm since has compromised its functionality.
A new LED marquee is in keeping with recent requests from other schools in the district.
Buchanan Elementary was named after the 28th Governor of Tennessee, John Price Buchanan (1847–1930), who served from 1891 to 1893. Buchanan is the only Rutherford County-born governor in the state’s history and lived two miles from the site of the school, which was built 46 years after his passing.
The school received its first addition in 1980 and a second addition in 1995.