Glen Alpine Food Pantry

Glen Alpine Food Pantry Our mission is to provide food to those in need in Glen Alpine and Western Burke County.

FOOD RESOURCES IN BURKE COUNTYHere is a list of all the available food pantries and food resources in Burke County with ...
04/06/2026

FOOD RESOURCES IN BURKE COUNTY

Here is a list of all the available food pantries and food resources in Burke County with their contact information and a map. I suggest calling any Pantry before you go as I cannot confirm this list is completely up to date.

Keep checking back to our page for updates!

We miss everyone and cannot wait to get back to serving our community!

04/01/2026

Attention:
Effective immediately, the Glen Alpine Food Pantry is closed until further notice.

We will not be having our food distribution service this Friday.

Please check our page or call 828-502-2297 for updates.

I will post a list of other food pantries later this evening to help our clients and community find resources while we are closed.

Thank you to all our partners, community members and supporters, volunteers, and most importantly our clients for your continued love and support while we transition through this difficult time. We hope to continue to our fight against hunger in and food scarcity in our community as soon as possible.

“Make us worthy, Lord, to serve those throughout the world who live and die in poverty or hunger. Give them, through our hands, this day their daily bread; and by our understanding love, give peace and joy. Amen.”
— Mother Teresa

A big THANK YOU to Telco Community Credit Union in Morganton for their generous donation! We appreciate Teleco for selec...
03/04/2026

A big THANK YOU to Telco Community Credit Union in Morganton for their generous donation!

We appreciate Teleco for selecting Glen Alpine Food Pantry as their charity for the year of 2025.

A huge THANK YOU to the students, administration, and staff of Burke County Public Schools for collecting over 1200 poun...
02/24/2026

A huge THANK YOU to the students, administration, and staff of Burke County Public Schools for collecting over 1200 pounds of food for the Glen Alpine Food Pantry!!!!

Your donations from the Superintendent’s Super Bowl Food Drive will help us feed thousands of Burke County residents in the coming months. This is a huge win for our Burke County community and the BCPS.

We are forever grateful and humbled by our students and their families’ generosity.

Great job BCPS Students!
— Megan Miller, Executive Director

02/03/2026

The Glen Alpine Food Pantry will be OPEN for food service during our regular service hours on Tuesday February 3 from 6pm to 8pm.

Our volunteers have been working hard to get back to serving our community again.

A big thanks to Glen Alpine United Methodist Church for having the parking lots, sidewalks, and surrounding area plowed and shoveled!!!!

Attention Clients and Volunteers: Unfortunately I have made the very difficult decision to close the Food Pantry for our...
01/30/2026

Attention Clients and Volunteers:

Unfortunately I have made the very difficult decision to close the Food Pantry for our regular Friday service.

The back parking lot used for our drive-thru service still has a large area of ice on the incline, and the sidewalk the volunteers use to bring boxes of food out to clients is still a solid sheet of ice. This makes it too dangerous for us to be open for our Friday food service.

I am very sorry for the inconvenience. Please know that our volunteers work tirelessly to serve our community and that this decision weighs heavily on my heart, as many of you have reached out to me in the last few days and expressed your needs.

We will be working hard next week to be open for our regular food service times of Tuesday from 6pm to 8pm and Friday from 12pm to 2pm (unless snow or ice conditions prevent).

Please stay safe through whatever winter weather the weekend may bring.

—Megan Miller
Executive Director

Glen Alpine Food Pantry would like to extend our gratitude to the lovely ladies of North Morganton United Methodist Chur...
01/26/2026

Glen Alpine Food Pantry would like to extend our gratitude to the lovely ladies of North Morganton United Methodist Church!!!!

Their very generous donation from earlier this week was a welcome surprise at a time when the Food Pantry definitely needs it.

Thank you North Morganton United Methodist Church and your kind, generous, and hard working ladies!!!!

“I don’t care about your politics. Hungry people need bread.” ❤️
01/26/2026

“I don’t care about your politics. Hungry people need bread.” ❤️

In 1835, a ship arrived in New Orleans carrying Irish families fleeing famine even before the Great Hunger. Among them was five-year-old Margaret Gaffney, who traveled with her parents from County Cavan, Ireland, hoping for a better life.

Within months, tragedy struck. Yellow fever swept through the Irish quarter of New Orleans, claiming the lives of her parents. At just six years old, Margaret was orphaned in a city that was hostile to Irish Catholics.

Margaret was taken in by Welsh neighbors who put her to work immediately—no school, no childhood, just hard labor. By age nine, she was working in a laundry, and by age eleven, she was completely supporting herself.

In a society that despised Irish immigrants, Margaret understood the prejudice against her people, even if she couldn't read the signs—"No Irish Need Apply" in job advertisements, "Irish Catholics cannot be trusted" by businessmen. The disdain was palpable, but Margaret didn't let it define her.

At twenty-one, Margaret married Charles Haughery, another Irish immigrant. Within a year, they had a daughter. But yellow fever returned, and within days, both her husband and baby died. At twenty-two, Margaret was left widowed, childless, illiterate, and still an Irish Catholic in a city that deemed her future bleak.

But Margaret refused to accept defeat. She took out a loan of forty dollars—a considerable sum at the time—and purchased two cows. She would start a dairy business, selling milk door-to-door in the French Quarter.

Many people laughed at her—a woman, an Irish immigrant, who couldn’t read or write, trying to run a business. But Margaret was undeterred. She worked tirelessly, getting up at 3 a.m. to milk the cows, driving her wagon around the neighborhood to deliver milk. She undercut her competitors, maintained high-quality milk, and, within a year, had repaid the loan and bought two more cows. Within five years, she had a thriving dairy operation.

In 1840, Margaret encountered a group of nuns struggling to run an orphanage, caring for children orphaned by yellow fever. Margaret was deeply moved by the plight of these children and decided to donate her entire daily milk production to the orphanage—free of charge. "I never had a cent I didn't earn by hard work," she told the nuns, "and I never forgot what it felt like to be hungry."

But giving away milk wasn't enough. In 1858, Margaret sold her dairy business and bought a failing bakery. With no experience in baking and unable to read recipes, Margaret learned the trade on her own. Within a year, she transformed the bakery into Margaret's Bakery, producing the most popular bread in New Orleans. She revolutionized the industry by pioneering packaged bread, creating uniform loaves that could be sold in stores.

Her bread became so ubiquitous that people began asking for "Margaret's" rather than bread. Every penny she earned beyond her modest living expenses went to support orphanages, hospitals, and homes for the elderly. During yellow fever outbreaks, she cared for the sick, buried the dead, and took in orphaned children.

When New Orleans fell to Union forces during the Civil War in 1862, Margaret kept her bakery running, feeding both Union soldiers and Confederate civilians alike, saying, "I don’t care about your politics. Hungry people need bread."

By the 1870s, Margaret was one of the wealthiest businesswomen in America. She owned the largest steam bakery in the South, employed hundreds, and commanded respect from New Orleans’ business elite—the same people who once refused to hire Irish immigrants.

Yet Margaret still lived modestly, wearing simple clothes and signing business documents with an "X" because she never learned to write her name. Every Sunday, she would visit the orphanages she supported, sitting with the children, sharing stories, and slipping coins into their pockets, always anonymously.

Margaret gave away over $600,000 to charity, equivalent to $18 million today. Her efforts built orphanages, funded hospitals, and ensured no child in New Orleans went hungry. Her life was devoted to the service of others.

Margaret passed away in 1882 at the age of sixty-nine. Her funeral was attended by thousands, and New Orleans businesses closed to honor her. The city erected a statue in her memory—the first statue of a woman in New Orleans, which still stands today at Margaret Place. The inscription reads: "Margaret, widow of Charles Haughery. Born in Ireland 1813. Died in New Orleans 1882. Her Life Was Devoted to Works of Charity."

At the base of the statue is a simple "X"—her mark, since she never learned to write her name.

Margaret Haughery, the Irish orphan who couldn’t read or write, became one of America’s greatest entrepreneurs and philanthropists. Her legacy is a testament to the power of determination, hard work, and the refusal to accept the limitations society placed on her.

01/25/2026

Attention Glen Alpine Food Pantry Clients and Volunteers:

Due to inclement weather, the Glen Alpine Food Pantry willl be closed on Monday and Tuesday.

If you need assistance, please call the me at (828) 502-2297.

Please stay safe during this ice storm!

— Megan Miller
Executive Director

01/22/2026

The Glen Alpine Food Pantry will be open tomorrow Friday January 23 from 12 - 2pm for food service.

We will open the entrance for the drive thru service no earlier than 11:40am.

Please stay safe during the upcoming winter weather!

Address

410 Linville Street
Glen Alpine, NC
28628

Opening Hours

Tuesday 6pm - 8pm
Friday 12pm - 2pm

Telephone

+18283919095

Website

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