
By Melanie Threlkeld McConnell
Alfred Blount â88 and Regina Blount â88 arenât quite plumb on when they met and fell in love, but the truth seems to lie
somewhere between the laundry room of Scott Hall, a science class and the universityâs
black gospel choir.
âYou know there are two truths?â said Regina, a playful dig at her husband of 33 years
for sharing his version of their beginning.
His and hers? âYes, thatâs right,â she said laughing.
The Blounts met as freshmen at WCU and married after graduation on Oct. 10, 1988.
Alfredâs degree was in marketing and Reginaâs in English, with a minor in journalism.
âI took Latin when I was in junior high and high school,â said Regina, who grew up
in Asheville. âThat gave me a really strong grasp on how language is put together,
and I just really enjoy that. I love grammar and I love reading. When I got to Western,
English was the thing for me.â
Alfred liked business and went to work for JC Penney following graduation, working
in several cities, including Knoxville, Tennessee, and Oak Ridge, Tennessee. But the
seemingly unending hours of retail took a toll. âWhen I got to the Oak Ridge store,
it really started interfering with being involved with church and attending church
and that was something that was important,â said Alfred, who grew up in Monroe. âI
prayed about it, and I resigned from Penneyâs and went to work for the YMCA for a
year, and then UPS for two years, and then came back to Asheville to pastor.â
Blount became pastor of Tried Stone Missionary Baptist Church, the same church in
which he and Regina married when they were congregants and fresh out of WCU. Heâs
been pastor for 22 years. âI found that I didnât have the drive or love for retail
that many of my cohorts had,â Alfred said. âI also knew that church would play an
important role in my future. It was retail that allowed me to evaluate and see where
my passion was and to pursue it.â
As a result, Alfred returned to school for his masterâs of divinity degree and currently
is working on his doctor of ministry degree from Gardner-Webb University. âOne of
the main things that I enjoy about being a pastor is the ability to watch people grow
and to be a part of this process. I have seen children in the congregation born, I
have watched them go through school and graduate, and go to college,â he said. âFor
some of them, I have even had the opportunity to officiate at their wedding and then
watch them become parents. Being able to be part of the lives of the members is very
special.â
Regina also earned her masterâs degree and works as a third grade learning specialist
at Carolina Day School. At Tried Stone, she works as the churchâs assistant choir
director â it has performed at Mountain Heritage Day off and on since 1980 â and with
the womenâs ministry, the outreach ministry and small groups. She knew what she was
in for when her husband switched professions. âMy grandfather was a pastor and my
uncles are pastors, and Iâve spent my entire life in the church,â she said.
Last winter, the church partnered with WCUâs School of Nursing and Buncombe County
Health and Human Services to host a COVID-19 clinic to encourage the primarily African
American congregation to get vaccinated. The successful event was just the kind of
community action event the Blounts relish. âWe had people who came who later sent
letters thanking us for opening up the church. We even had a gentleman who donated
some books for our library. It was a good experience,â Alfred said.
The Blountsâ community activism isnât new, but a continuation of who they were as
Catamounts more than 30 years ago. As students, they actively participated at Cullowhee
Baptist Church and remain close friends of its former pastor Joe Yelton and his wife,
who became the Blountsâ adoptive parents, Regina said. âWeâre still connected to them
now. He helped officiate our wedding and their daughter was one of our flower girls.â
They also were active with the Baptist Student Union, the Organization of Ebony Students
and what was known then as the ÌđčÏÊÓÆ”app Inspirational Choir, the
universityâs gospel choir, where for four years, Regina sang soprano and Alfred tenor.
Alfred was a member of the business fraternity. They also both lived in Scott Hall,
which is the source of playful disagreement about how it brought them together. âWe
had a science class together, we were in the gospel choir together and we lived in
the same dorm,â said Regina.
Alfred confirms their mutual science class, but takes the story in a different direction.
âFreshman year, my room assignment got messed up and I ended up living on the first
floor of Scott with the basketball players,â he said. âShe lived upstairs in Scott
and weâd see each other in the lobby. The real story is, I was doing my laundry in
the basement and she had never seen a man fold his own clothes, and she fell in love
with me that day.â
Whatever the truth about how it happened, it worked. The Blounts have three grown
children. Victoria â17 is working on her masterâs degree in divinity at Duke Divinity School. Stephen earned
his bachelorâs and masterâs degrees from Mars Hill University, and DeOnna is a graduate
of North Carolina Central University, who plans to attend nursing school.
The Blounts credit their church family with helping them successfully manage the art
of raising children and working full time in a business that demands much of their
time. âWe have a really strong support system, and we know that some people in ministry
donât have strong support systems, and some by choice, because not everybody wants
to be connected,â Regina said. âBut for us, itâs been important that we had somebody
that we could connect with and we donât take that for granted. You always hear the
phrase it takes a village, and it really does. We know we couldnât have done what
we did, just the two of us, because there were times when both of us were busy, busy,
busy, and we had people who really, really helped us.â
They credit WCU with helping them find the path that built their life. âOur friends
were white, Black and Native American,â Regina said. âWeâre still connected to some
of these people today. Theyâre our friends for life.â
