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<p><strong>4. For a future owner, the abandoned Stonewall Jackson Reform School may become an epic mansion.</strong></p>
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<p>Before the 1900s, children who committed crimes were condemned to the same penalties as adults. In one well-known case, a 13-year-old child was sentenced to three years of hard labor in jail for petty stealing. The Stonewall Jackson Reform School was founded by inhabitants of Concord, North Carolina, who felt that this was unjust. At its peak in the 1920s, the reform school had over 200 students.</p>
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The Stonewall Jackson Reform School. Credit: Urbex Underground

4. For a future owner, the abandoned Stonewall Jackson Reform School may become an epic mansion.

Before the 1900s, children who committed crimes were condemned to the same penalties as adults. In one well-known case, a 13-year-old child was sentenced to three years of hard labor in jail for petty stealing. The Stonewall Jackson Reform School was founded by inhabitants of Concord, North Carolina, who felt that this was unjust. At its peak in the 1920s, the reform school had over 200 students.

Its use was brief, as was the case with most of these abandoned structures. People modified the reform school's requirements in the 1970s. Only They sent violent offenders to juvenile detention in the past. With the welfare system and child protection services in place, disadvantaged children committed fewer minor crimes such as food theft. They constructed a new structure, and the old one was no longer in use. The original 1909 school building has been listed on the National Historic Register, ensuring that it will not be demolished. It's still on the market, waiting for a buyer. Many people believe the structure is haunted, and almost no one wants to undertake the extensive restoration work required.

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