Emeline Fears Carpenter
The story of this site begins with a name that still matters in Nacogdoches. Emeline Fears Carpenter’s life in education gave this place historical meaning, and that legacy continues to shape how Sparks Lake Activity Center looks toward the future.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!A Place With Real Local History
The building now tied to the Sparks Lake Activity Center story stands at 1005 Leroy Street in Nacogdoches, Texas. Before this new chapter, the site was known as Emeline Carpenter Elementary School, a campus opened on Leroy Street in 1964 during a time when local public schools were still segregated.
That history gives the site a deeper meaning. It was not simply a school building. It was a place rooted in a historically Black neighborhood, shaped by the realities of its time, and connected to generations of students and families in this part of the city.
That is why the story of this property matters. It is a story about education, memory, perseverance, and the importance of keeping local history visible as the site moves into a new era.
More Than a Building
This is not only about saving an old structure. It is about restoring a place that can once again mean something in people’s daily lives. A place where families can gather, youth can participate, neighbors can reconnect, and the community can feel invited in rather than shut out.
The legacy of Emeline Fears Carpenter deserves more than remembrance. It deserves to be carried forward through a space that serves people now.
A Community-Focused Vision
Many venues may be privately owned, and this one is too — but what makes SLAC different is the desire to move forward with the community, not apart from it. This project is being built with the hope that the people of Nacogdoches, downtown visitors, nearby rural areas, and the wider region will see it as a place to connect, belong, and prosper together.
There is no other place in Nacogdoches being rebuilt quite like this with that same level of community intention.
Why Warren “Ralph” Sparks Matters in This Story
Today, this new chapter is being carried forward by Warren “Ralph” Sparks — a respected Black businessman, second-generation business owner, and a well-known name in the Nacogdoches community through Sparks Trucking, Sparks Lake Resort, and Sparks Lake Activity Center.
That matters because SLAC is not being rebuilt as an isolated private project with no larger purpose. It is being rebuilt by someone with deep local roots who is investing in a place that can help bring people together across the broader community.
The vision for the activity center is not only to preserve what once stood here, but to create something active, welcoming, and useful — a place where families, youth, visitors, and local residents can gather, participate, and share in something positive together.
In that sense, this work is about more than ownership. It is about continuity, reinvestment, and the belief that a historically meaningful site can once again serve as a place of connection for the entire community.
The Woman Behind the Name Still Matters
Emeline Fears Carpenter’s story belongs in the story of this site. Her years of service in education, and the school that carried her name, give this property a deeper meaning that should remain visible as SLAC grows.
Visit the full legacy page to read more about her life, her work, and the history connected to this place.
Visit the Legacy PagePast to Present
Emeline Carpenter begins teaching
Her work in education begins in Nacogdoches, starting a legacy that would shape generations.
A school is built bearing her name
Emeline Carpenter Elementary opens on Leroy Street in the neighborhood tied to her life and legacy.
The property enters a new chapter
The site moves into a different era, but its historical roots remain an important part of its meaning.
SLAC carries the story forward
The activity center now stands as part of a future-focused effort to restore purpose, bring people together, and keep the site connected to the community it serves.