Dougherty County fifth-grader’s spelling of ‘pervade’ brings win at Tuesday spelling bee

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By Alan Mauldin
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ALBANY — Eighteen Dougherty County students displayed their spelling prowess on Tuesday, with the winner taking home the spelling bee trophy after successfully rattling off the letters for “innards” and “pervade.”

Athena Garvey, a fifth-grader at Lake Park Elementary School, will represent the school system at the regional level after edging out Alice Coachman Elementary School fifth-grader Emmanuel Fowler. The contest took about an hour and a half and stretched for some 100 rounds.

“It’s awesome,” Raphael McCoy, the father of contestant Sa’ir McCoy, said of the competition. “It was a little bit of a nail-biter. It was enlightening. It was fun.”

Mother Ebony McCoy said that her son, whose love is animation, took the spelling bee in stride.

“I just feel like everything comes natural to him,” she said. “When I was saying you’ve got to buckle up, he just ignored me and did his own thing.”

Athena said her mother helped her study for the contest.

“I’m very excited,” she said of winning. “I studied the words they gave me.”

Emmanuel’s mother, Marife Fowler, said he also worked hard ahead of the spelling bee.

“He came close and he did so well,” she said.

Albany Area Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Barbara Rivera Holmes, who served as the pronouncer during the bee, seemed to enjoy her first turn in that position.

“I love spelling bees,” said Holmes, a member of the Georgia Board of Regents who referenced her former time working as a newspaper reporter to the audience “I love words. I participated in them when I was in school and they’re so important.

“Communication, vocabulary, spelling; those are foundations for learning and succeeding in the workplace.”

Holmes predicted that the students’ spelling success will help them go on to do great things in the future.

“This was a lot of fun,” she said. “It was inspiring to be with our students and their families. I’m really proud of all of them.”

Staff Photo: Alan MauldinAlanMauldin
Staff Photo: Alan MauldinAlanMauldin

Athena Garvey holds up the trophy on stage after winning the Tuesday spelling bee held at Monroe High School. Garvey outlasted the other 17 contestants to win the prize and the opportunity to represent the Dougherty County School System at the district spelling bee in February.

Author

Alan has been a reporter for 30 years, including at The Moultrie Observer, Thomasville Times-Enterprise and The Albany Herald. His favorite book is “Catch-22,” and he has an Australian shepherd/American bulldog mix named Maxwell.

Read Alan’s stories.

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