Skip to content
Campus Alert Archive
Lees-McRae

Banner Elk Cut Off: A National Guard Helicopter Evacuation Ended Lees-McRae's In-Person Semester for 38 Days

NChurricaneemergency notificationhigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

On September 27, 2024, Hurricane Helene's remnants devastated Banner Elk, North Carolina, where Lees-McRae College sits in the southern Appalachians. Main roads to campus became impassable from fallen trees, downed power lines, and historic flooding debris. With 700 to 800 students stranded, the North Carolina National Guard evacuated students by helicopter to Hickory, where parents collected them. The college transitioned to virtual instruction October 7 and resumed in-person classes November 4.

Alerts
2
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Lees-McRae College
Private Liberal Arts · NC
~800 studentsBobcat Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

2 messages in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

Some alert texts below are approximate reconstructions from news coverage, not confirmed verbatim transcripts. Reconstructed texts are shown in italic with a dashed border. Verified verbatim texts have a solid border and are marked accordingly.

INITIAL ALERTFacebook
SHELTER IN PLACE: Students should continue to shelter in place until advised that it is safe to leave campus.
Posted to the college's official Facebook page on September 28, 2024 at 5:40 PM EDT — the day after Hurricane Helene's remnants devastated Banner Elk and Avery County
Cell service and power were severed across Avery County in the immediate aftermath, so social media (broadcast over the still-functional college Wi-Fi to anyone with a phone signal at all) became one of the few reliable communications channels for stranded students
The blunt all-caps 'SHELTER IN PLACE' headline reflects the urgency of the moment — roads in and out of Banner Elk were impassable from fallen trees, downed power lines, and historic flooding debris, and student travel attempts were a real safety concern
UPDATEEmail
Approximate reconstruction218 chars
In-person classes remain suspended. Beginning Monday, October 7, virtual instruction is underway as faculty work to transition courses online. The College has acquired more than 300 eTexts to support remote coursework.

This text has been reconstructed from news coverage and may not reflect the exact original wording.

Reconstructed virtual-pivot announcement; partner-college reporting and Lees-McRae's safety updates confirm October 7 as the date virtual instruction began with 300+ eTexts acquired
The pivot to virtual instruction was complicated by the fact that many evacuated students lacked stable internet at their evacuation destinations — the eText acquisition was a workaround for this
The 10-day gap between the September 27 storm and the October 7 virtual transition reflects the time required to evacuate, account for, and re-equip a dispersed student population
Context

Background

Lees-McRae College is a private liberal arts college of about 800 students in Banner Elk, North Carolina — sitting at over 3,700 feet of elevation in Avery County, deep in the southern Appalachian mountains. When Hurricane Helene's remnants struck Western North Carolina on September 27, 2024, Banner Elk was among the hardest-hit communities. Roads in and out of campus became impassable from fallen trees, downed power lines, and debris from historic flooding. With 700 to 800 students stranded plus residents seeking shelter, Lees-McRae had not initially evacuated. Beginning on Saturday and Sunday after the storm, the North Carolina National Guard mobilized helicopters to evacuate stranded students to Hickory, where parents drove to collect them. An entire condo complex was also airlifted out. International students unable to reach home countries were temporarily housed at Queens University of Charlotte, and other students were offered rooms at Guilford College in Greensboro. The college transitioned to virtual instruction beginning October 7, acquiring more than 300 eTexts. In-person classes resumed November 4, 2024 — 38 days after the storm. The Banner Elk swim team practiced at and assisted Greensboro pools during the displacement.
Analysis

Key Findings

Lees-McRae's evacuation was conducted by NC National Guard helicopter — an extraordinarily rare delivery method for a college population in the modern era
The college's 38-day in-person suspension is among the longest weather-driven instructional pauses recorded for a US residential college outside Puerto Rico's Maria recovery
Three regional partner colleges (Queens, Guilford, and Greensboro institutions) absorbed displaced Lees-McRae students — an informal mutual-aid network that emerged within days of the storm
The 10-day gap from storm to virtual instruction reflects the operational reality of evacuating, accounting for, and re-equipping a dispersed student population without normal communications
Outcome
All Lees-McRae students were evacuated safely, with no fatalities or major injuries reported on campus. Helicopter evacuations transported stranded students to Hickory and an entire condo complex was airlifted out. International students were temporarily housed at Queens University of Charlotte. The college transitioned to remote learning beginning October 7 with more than 300 eTexts acquired to support virtual coursework, and resumed in-person classes November 4.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. Official
  3. Official
  4. News
  5. News
  6. Source
Tags
hurricaneheleneweatherappalachian-floodingnorth-carolinalees-mcraeprivate-liberal-artsnational-guard-evacuationhelicopter-evacuationvirtual-instruction-pivot
Added May 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion