A 101-year-old man named Merrill Pittman Cooper has finally bagged his High School Diploma after abandoning his studies in 1938 due to the civil war and financial crisis he encountered.
Achieving a High School Diploma is a long life dream for Merrill Pittman Cooper as he was enrolled in school between 1934 to 1938 but had to drop out.
According to his story, he was a student at Storer College in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia, United States, a boarding school founded after the Civil War that initially educated formerly enslaved children, between 1934 and 1938.
He however realized that his mother, who worked as a live-in housekeeper, couldn’t afford to make the final tuition payment for his senior year. He encouraged her to move them to Philadelphia, where she had family and was forced to drop out.
“She worked so hard, and it all became so difficult that I just decided it would be best to give up continuing at the school,” Cooper told Washington Post.
Since dropping out in 1938, Cooper took a job at a women’s apparel store in Philadelphia to help pay the bills, then was hired in 1945 as a city trolley car operator.
He accomplished a career in the transportation industry but still regrets not getting his diploma. He narrated his wish to his family who then opted to support him achieve his dream.