WATERLOO,
IOWA — A 99-year-old Iowa woman who dropped out of a high school more
than 80 years ago despite needing only one credit to graduate has
finally received her diploma. Audrey Crabtree, of Cedar Falls, smiled Monday as she received an honorary diploma for her time at Waterloo East High School. "And I feel so much smarter," Crabtree quipped.
Crabtree,
who began her education at a one-room school house in northeast Iowa,
left high school in 1932 due to a swimming and diving accident that
forced her to miss several school days. She also had to care for her
sick grandmother.
"I
was a senior, but I was short a credit, so I would've had to go back
the next fall," she told the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier
That
would have interfered with her plans to marry her first husband. In
1957, the couple bought the flower shop where Crabtree had worked after
their two children started school. But her husband died of a heart
attack two months into their business venture.
Crabtree
operated Flowers by Audrey for 28 years. She married two more times and
outlived both husbands. Her family today includes five grandchildren
and four great grandchildren.
Despite Crabtree's professional and family success, those around her had noted her
dissatisfaction with not finishing school.
"She
had voiced quite a while back the one regret she had in life was that
she never had gotten her diploma," said Shelley Hoffman, Crabtree's
granddaughter.
Hoffman contacted Waterloo Community Schools and helped arrange the diploma ceremony.
Family
and friends surrounded Crabtree as the current principal of East High
handed her a diploma during an education board meeting.
"I wouldn't advise anyone to drop out," she said. "I just have to say in my life the Lord has been so good."
Crabtree
was given a copy of her last report card and memorabilia from her time
at the high school, including a jacket and homecoming pins. She also
received more than 100 handmade congratulatory cards from middle school
students.
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