“Attempt something so great for God that it is doomed to failure unless God be in it.”
These words pictured above helped
motivate Eddie
Staub – with no land, little funding, experience
or local ties – to establish Eagle Ranch over
two decades ago. Because of its extraordinary formation
and early growth, the Eagle Ranch Children's Home
was called "the miracle on Chestnut Mountain"
by CNN television during the initial phases of construction
and development.
The first
boys home at Eagle Ranch opened in 1985 and the
last two homes were completed in 1997, for a total
of six boys’ homes. In the fall of 2001, Eagle
Ranch opened two girls’ homes. An on-campus
school was started that same year, allowing us to educate
both boys and girls in grades six through nine.
Since its inception, Eagle Ranch has
provided a home for more than 600 troubled teens and
children and today Eagle Ranch one of the nation’s
most progressive therapeutic Christian homes for children
in crisis, and the largest
children’s home in Northeast Georgia.
In House
Resolution 314, the Georgia General Assembly recognized
and commended Eddie Staub and Eagle Ranch for providing
"...an inestimable service to children and families
in crisis in the State of Georgia.." This House Resolution
also commends the charitable
organization of Eagle Ranch Children's Home by
stating "...Eagle Ranch is run almost entirely on
private
donations and has consistently remained debt-free..."
The inspiring story of the founding of Eagle Ranch is told in
the book “On
Eagle’s Wings” (Looking Glass Books,
1995), now in its ninth printing.
To order your copy, please call 770-967-8500.
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