She was born in 1926 in Sampson County, North Carolina. She died 16 years after the death of her husband, James Carr, following 60 years of marriage at the age of 90. Together, they birthed three sons and three daughters. The youngest son, Darwin Glenn Carr, was the athlete of the family. He honed his basketball skills shooting in peach baskets and rims with no net nailed to a pine tree. He played
against boys much older than him in the dusty yard where he lived. Darwin’s growth spurts during the summers eventually caught up with the older players in the neighborhood as he became the force to be reckoned with. His success at Midway High School earned him a slot in the East/West Allstar Game at the Greensboro Coliseum playing with the best of the best. Although he was capable of playing D1, his coaches and faculty were not accustomed to the pitch. Olive College was eager to get Darwin on their roster as a Jr. College and convinced him to stay when they transitioned to a four-year school. He was awarded the first ever Athletics Hall of Fame Award in Basketball in 2008. https://umotrojans.com/sports/2020/7/10/hall-of-fame-index.aspx?path=insideathletics
Rosie Carr supported Darwin every way that she could and constantly kept him in prayer. Unfortunately, she only saw him play once during his High School years on Senior Night when she had to es**rt him to center court. Rosie Carr loved her baby boy, but the anxiety of watching the game meant that he might get hurt. She made sure his older sister, Peggy, was there to cheer him on. But with every win, she had bragging rights. Understand, her prayers bought Darwin through when he hurt his knee and the doctors said he would never play again. Through prayer and determination, Darwin came back after arthroscopic surgery and took Mount Olive College Trojans to the Championship. Darwin was the first one in the family to get a four-year degree, but he never fulfilled his dream of playing in the NBA. His love for his mother led him to establish the Rosie Carr Academy to honor her support of young people through the vehicle of basketball. She believed in keeping young people busy and responsible and to keep God First. Darwin is continuing her love for the youth and his desire to produce high-level athletes by permeating his skills in their ethics. Also, being the one to believe in his students and push them to the next level. Learning from scripture in Jeremiah 29:11 emphasized by his mother, “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me,” Darwin pulls his inner strength and replaces grief with joy.