Wade Brown, former Boone mayor and business leader, died
Monday at the age of 101.
Brown was born in Blowing Rock in 1907. He was educated in the
one-room Silver Lake School, completed Mars Hill Junior College,
and received his law degree from Wake Forest College.
He passed his bar examination before he graduated from the law
school at Wake Forest University in 1931.
He returned to Boone and opened his law practice in Boone in 1931,
where he quickly became involved in civic activities and economic
development.
An original signatory of the Boone Area Chamber of Commerce charter,
Brown was instrumental in the development and expansion of the
Boone Golf Course, Watauga Medical Center and Horn in the West,
the new Watauga County Library, and other community and educational
endeavors.
He served in the North Carolina Senate and House of Representatives
and was mayor of Boone from 1961 to 1967.
His autobiography Recollections and Reflections was
released in 1997, serving as one of the most illuminating local
histories of the last century.
He was prominent in the development of Boone Golf Course, even
writing a book about it. The golf course was established by Brown
in 1959, and the next year became the site of one of the first
ski areas.
Brown recalled strapping on a pair of old, wooden skis and being
photographed skiing down the golf course one winter, which helped
spark local interest in the ski industry.
He was foundational not just to the chamber but also to
the community, said Boone Area Chamber of Commerce director
Dan Meyer.
He had a great wealth of stories.
The chamber has a community-recognition award given out annually
in Browns name. Meyer said Brown was one of the last remaining
of the generation of people who had helped build the High Countrys
economic and tourism base.
Brown was the author of Recollections and Reflections,
an autobiographical memoir that has been called one of the best
local histories documenting the areas last century.
He just seemed to me to be one of the leaders, said
former Boone Mayor Velma Burnley. He was known far and wide
and respected by everyone. Its the passing of a great era.
He was a talker, but more than that he was an encourager.
He was a role model.
His small downtown office is now the home of the Downtown Boone
Development Association. Another lasting monument is his granting
of a conservation easement for a 31-acre parcel on Big Yarnall
Mountain overlooking the Boone Golf Course.
The family will receive friends from 6 p.m. to 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at Austin & Barnes Funeral Home. See the obituary page (page
7) for more details.