News, Russellville
 By  Jonathan Willis Published 
6:02 am Saturday, August 4, 2012

Former students to honor longtime band leader Ikard

For 30 years, Curtis Ikard served as the director of the Russellville High School Marching Hundred and the high school show choir.
During that time, he instilled discipline, passion and many other positive traits into the countless students that he worked with. Now, some 25 years after his retirement, many of Ikard’s former students are working to show him just how much he is appreciated.
The “Curtis Ikard Performing Arts Scholarship” has been established for a deserving RHS student beginning this year and a new annual award called the “Curtis Ikard Challenge Cup” will be presented at the Tri-State Kudzu Klassic Marching Festival each September.
“A couple of years ago I was at the Kudzu Klassic and they were giving out awards and I kept waiting for one to be named after Mr. Ikard,” said former Marching Hundred member Trent Stephenson, who has helped organize the efforts.
“He is the one who helped build a lot of the tradition that the band here has and he had a great impact on a lot of our lives.”
A surprise visit to Ikard this summer convinced Stephenson that he needed to do something for the man who led the marching Hundred from 1957 to 1987.
“When I was at his house, another former student, Shannon Scruggs O’Neal, stopped by to tell him that she had nominated him for the Alabama Music Educators Hall of Fame,” Stephenson said.
“We began talking and we both knew we had to do something for him.”
Ikard, who is 84 now and living in Florence, said the honors are humbling.
“It’s awesome that former students would do something like this, especially after all these years,” Ikard said.
“We had a lot of great times through the years when I was at Russellville. There were many special students that came through and who went on to do great things.”
One of the highlights of having the award at the Kudzu Klassic on Sept. 29 at Russellville Stadium named after him is that a reception will be held from 5-8 p.m. that night in the school cafeteria. That will allow Ikard the chance to meet and greet many of the former students that he mentored for so long.
“That is something I am really looking forward too,” he said. “I haven’t seen many of them in a long time.”
A meeting will be held at the high school fine arts center at 6 p.m. on Monday, Aug. 6 to discuss many of the plans for the event.
Stephenson encourages all former show choir and Marching Hundred members who worked with Ikard to attend.
“We have heard from a lot of people from the 1970s and 1980s, but we want to encourage people from the 1950s and 1960s to come also,” he said.
A Facebook page has been established at http://www.facebook.com/CurtisIkardPerformingArtsScholarship .
“He just had such an impact on us and this is something he deserves,” Stephenson said.

Also on Franklin County Times
Safety, appearance shape cleanup operation
Main, News, Russellville, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 11, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE -- City crews have started working through a list of 11 unsightly properties as part of a cleanup and code-compliance effort. Mayor David...
NWSCC launches first nursing apprenticeship
Main, News, Phil Campbell, ...
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 11, 2026
PHIL CAMPBELL — Northwest Shoals Community College has launched a paid nursing apprenticeship program with Decatur Morgan Hospital. The partnership co...
HB67 clears House
Main, News, Russellville
February 11, 2026
Rep. Jamie Kiel’s bill to prohibit the state from selling voters’ phone numbers for comm ercial purposes moved a step closer last week to final passag...
Clubs support American Heart Month
Columnists, Opinion
HERE AND NOW
February 11, 2026
Most of us can name a family member or friend who heart disease has touched. I can. That is why heart health does not feel abstract to me. It does not...
Health care reform starts with insurers
Columnists, Opinion
February 11, 2026
Every president promises to fix health care, but the system rarely seems to change for the better. Even when so-called reforms pass, prices remain unp...
Community honors Army veteran Weidman
Franklin County, News, Russellville
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 11, 2026
RUSSELLVILLE – Veterans and community members gathered Feb. 2 at Pinkard Funeral Home to honor John Weidman, a U.S. Army veteran who retired as a staf...
Newspaper dresses create walk through fashion history
News, Phil Campbell, Phil Campbell Bobcats
María Camp maria.camp@franklincountytimes.com 
February 11, 2026
PHIL CAMPBELL — Students in Aleah Harris’ fashion classes created dresses from newspapers with each group picking a different decade. Senior Ava Hall ...
DYW ‘awesome experience’ for Marshall
Franklin County, News
Chelsea Retherford For the FCT 
February 11, 2026
Backstage in Montgomery, as names were called and lights went up onstage, a Franklin County woman was among three local woman doing the unexpected — c...

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *