HOME
Get the latest weather forecast!

Search

Contact Information

OFFICE: (912) 537-9203
FAX: (912) 537-4477
WVOP: (912) 537-9202
WTCQ: (912) 538-9898
WYUM: (912) 538-1017
Paul Anderson Youth Home, a fully accredited and licensed home offering a second chance to young men in crisis, begins its 60th-anniversary celebration this year with its 16th annual Bike Ride. Over the course of five days, July 19–23, five residents of the home will travel a total of more than 300 miles by bicycle on routes through and around Paul Anderson’s hometown of Toccoa, Georgia, 90 miles northeast of Atlanta.
The event is part fundraiser, and each rider can be sponsored by donors at payhbikeride.com. They will be riding in the rural northeast of the state, passing into South Carolina, and traveling around Tallulah Gorge State Park, the Chattahoochie-Oconee National Forest, and small Georgia towns Wiley, Lula and Lakemont.
The event also recalls and commemorates a foundational moment in the history of Paul Anderson Youth Home. At its founding in 1961, the former Olympic gold-medal winner Anderson hopped on a bicycle and rode from Vidalia, Georgia, 1,200 miles to Omaha, Nebraska. He did this for the same reasons the five boys do it today, to raise funds and raise awareness of the mission to give troubled young men a second chance through Christ. Now 60 years later, the Paul Anderson Youth Home celebrates more than 1,400 lives changed through a process of recovery, restoration, and redemption.

"It is only fitting that we hold this year's ride in Paul’s hometown of Toccoa, Ga. as we continue to commemorate that original ride," said Glenda Anderson, co-founder of PAYH. "Our prayer is that this will be a transformative experience for each of the five young men. This ride is their chance to demonstrate how far they’ve come physically, mentally, and spiritually – and to prove to themselves that with hard work, they can do anything."
Since the riders are students of PAYH, each young man’s struggle to overcome emotional problems, bad decisions, and spiritual challenges is symbolized in the physical fortitude to travel such distances. Anderson, a world-class athlete, stressed physical fitness as one component of honoring God. The endurance needed to achieve these distances, in turn, honors his lessons of how exercising the body is as important as exercising the mind, filling it with positivity and prayer.
Sponsorships are still available for the 16th annual Bike Ride. 

The bike ride is being held three months before the 60th-anniversary celebration of Paul Anderson Youth Home, planned for Saturday, October 23, 2021, at the campus in Vidalia. Festivities will include speakers, music, entertainment, food and honored guests. The event will also raise funds for scholarships and the home’s general fund. 

To learn more about Paul Anderson Youth Home and family resources, visit payh.org.
(Courtesy of Paul Anderson Youth)

Meet The Staff

  • General Manager

    Listen to WVOP

    Jeff Raiford

    912-537-9202
  • Program Director

    Listen to WTCQ

    Bob Roberts, WTCQ

    912-538-9898
  • Program Director

    Listen to WYUM

    Jim Perry, WYUM

    912-538-1017
  • Traffic / News Director

    Kathy

    Kathy Hilt

    912-537-9202