Background
Carpenter was a native of Boyle County, Kentucky, a son of James B. and Augusta Carpenter. Carpenter"s family was of Germanic descent, from George Zimmerman (which Anglicizes to Carpenter), who was born ca.
educator founder of Montverde Industrial School
Carpenter was a native of Boyle County, Kentucky, a son of James B. and Augusta Carpenter. Carpenter"s family was of Germanic descent, from George Zimmerman (which Anglicizes to Carpenter), who was born ca.
Carpenter graduated from Sue Bennett Memorial School, now Sue Bennett College, at London, Kentucky, and worked his way through Kentucky Wesleyan College, where he received the Bachelor of Arts degree in 1909.
1720 in Switzerland, emigrated to colonial Pennsylvania around 1740, and settled in Rockingham County, Virginia prior to the American Revolutionary War. After leaving college Carpenter became business manager of Asbury College at Wilmore, Kentucky, where he remained a year and then accepted the same position with his Alma Mater, Kentucky Wesleyan College, where he also remained a year, and then became President of the Epworth Training School at South Bend, Indiana, for a year. Believing that there was a need for a practical type of education for American boys and girls that would "train the heart, head and hand," Carpenter went to Florida in 1912 for the purpose of founding an institution in which students had to exert physical labor in addition to classroom labor.
After making a complete survey of the state he decided to found his school at Montverde, where he purchased considerable acreage and built a small school building.
Early students built some of the original buildings and furniture, planted crops, tended livestock and performed other duties in order to help pay their tuition. The Montverde School grew into one of the largest and best known boarding schools in the United States and is well known abroad.
In addition to his connection with the Montverde School, Carpenter found time to successfully speculate in real estate and farm oranges in Montverde, earning him additional recognition as one of the outstanding men of the southern part of Lake County.