The children of Dalton McLeod, Fuquay Springs, N.C., taken Sept. 17,
1935. This photo is part of the Library of Congress’ online collection of
historical photos. Go to http://www.loc.gov/pictures/ to search
the collection.
Pages
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Thursday, September 29, 2016
Wednesday, September 28, 2016
Even Though Courts Say Student Is White, Wake County Parents Remove Other Students Over Rumor, 1916
“Alleged Mixed
Blood Raises Row in School,” from the French
Broad Hustler, Hendersonville, N.C.,
September 21, 1916.
Wake County Having Trouble in One School Over Race Question—Appeal
Availeth Not
County
Superintendent D.F. Giles of Wake County strove to open Mount Vernon school one
day last week but when he closed his beautiful appeal to the manhood of the
place, parents led away their children and precipitated the old trouble.
The school failed
last year when J.R. Medlin’s children, about the likeliest looking to be found,
it is said, came for registration. Mr. Medlin’s children were pronounced
pure-blooded by the Superior court, by the Supreme court and by all the law
that could be scraped up. They were therefore within their perfect rights. But the
neighborhood swears by all the horns of the altar that they have an
infinitesimal tinge of black blood in them and the community will not support
the school.
Last year when
Superintendent Giles placed his teachers out there the school broke into
hostile camp and a subscription session was taught near that place, which is
three miles from Raleigh. It was thought the prejudice was overcome and it was
announced that 40 or 50 would stick this year. They did show up, and Mr. Giles
is up against immemorial trouble.
The community has
not persecuted the Medlins. It has simply refused to attend the school since
the Medlin mixed blood controversy arose. When it came up the board of
education ruled against the Medlins. They appealed to the Superior court and
there the jury deciding the issues of fact pronounced the children of pure
blood. The appeal went up and Chief Justice Clark, writing the opinion, relied
on the jury. Justice Walker dissented. Yesterday Professor Giles tried to
appeal to the community by telling it that its citizenship, good and true, had
decided the children all white. The patrons demurred to his flattery. They said
the jury had been picked for a peculiar purpose.
Mr. Giles had
commissioned Mr. and Mrs. R.L. Hoke to teach the school. These good people are
relatives of the soldiers and jurists who bear that name, it is said. The
teachers began as though they had never heard of trouble. They weren’t
troubling trouble until trouble troubled them. Which was uncommonly early.
Civil War Law Doesn’t Allow Tar Heel Troops to Vote in This Election, 1916
“Tar Heel Troops
Can’t Vote on Border,” from the Hickory
Daily Record, Sept. 26, 1916
Raleigh, Sept.
25—Chief Justice Walter Clark of the Supreme Court, in a statement answered
numerous inquiries, expressed the view that there is no law under which the
North Carolina guardsmen now being transported from this state to the Mexican
border can vote in the November election.
A state statute
under which the Civil War North Carolina troops voted out of the state was limited
as to being in force simply to the time peace was decided between the
Confederacy and the United States. The chief justice says numbers of other
states of the Union have special statutes permitting troops to vote wherever on
duty, and some even allowing traveling men to vote by mail from other states.
He advised that the
legislature should provide for future voting of North Carolina troops, but this
will not cure impending disenfranchisement of about 3,200 guardsmen now leaving
the state for the Mexican border in the event they are not returned to the
state before election day.
Monday, September 26, 2016
Miss Effie Bond of Angier, N.C., Is Business Woman of Note, 1905
From the Raleigh Enterprise, September
1905
The business woman
in the South is not unknown, but they are somewhat scarce. The career of Miss
Effie Bond of Angier is worthy of note.
Two years ago her
father gave her a deed for a store-house, stock of goods, and nine dwelling
houses, all located in Angier. Miss Bond was then but 18 years old, being 20
now. At that time the stock was worth about $900. A recent inventory shows that
it is worth $3,970.46. The stock consists of dry goods, notions, shoes,
furniture, heavy and fancy groceries, etc.
Miss Bond has
conducted the business unaided all the time. She collects the rents for nine
houses and runs a dairy business that nets about $35 per month in addition to
everything else. Recently she took her brother into the store to assist with
the books, etc., as it has grown until she cannot do all the work.
Miss Bond knows how
to buy and what to buy. She recently arranged to buy 1,000 bushels of North
Carolina corn to be delivered October 1st.
She is bright,
energetic, pretty, independent, and was raised in Panther Branch Township, Wake
county.
Sunday, September 25, 2016
S.H. Farabee Praises Fallen Aviation Ace Kiffin Rockwell, 1916
Editorial by S.H.
Farabee, the Hickory Daily Record, September 26, 1916
In giving his life
for the cause of France, Kiffin Rockwell, who joined the French army from North
Carolina, has not died in vain. He has paid back to the French people a part of
the debt we owe to LaFayette and other heroes who strove for American
independence. Rockwell is not the only American youth who has responded to the
call of France. Bleuthernral and Thurman, southern football stars, are today
rendering great aid to the republic across the Atlantic.
Rockwell’s fame
will not die. As great as will be the grief of his mother in Winston-Salem, she
has the consoling thought that her son died fighting for the right. What better
end could have come to this bold youth?
Americans of all
shades love or admire France. To her the most sympathy is extended in her great
trial, for her most prayers are offered. If Rockwell has caused the flame of
patriotism to burn brighter among the French, if his death has rekindled in the
American people the warmth they here always felt for their friends across the
sea, then he is a martyr. He is not dead; he cannot die.
Greensboro Editorial Praises Kiffin Rockwell's Service in Foreign Legion, 1916
“For Lafayette,” and editorial from the Greensboro Daily News. If you’d like to read all of Laurence Binyon’s poem, go to http://www.bartleby.com/266/41.html. Chapman, the man without a first name in this story, is Victor Chapman of New York, who also enlisted in the French Foreign Legion to fight with the French before the United States entered World War I. When Corporal Chapman was killed, Sgt. Kiffen Rockwell wrote Chapman’s parents. I found this and another story about Kiffen Rockwell after my post about him on Sept. 22, 2016. To see photos of Rockwell and his grave in France, go to that day's post.
“I see them, men transfigured
Again a dream, dilate
Fabulous with the Titan-throb
Of battling Europe’s fate.”
Laurence Binyon’s “Men of Verdun” is the best elegy that could be imagined for Kiffin Rockwell and for Chapman. Yesterday only ordinary American boys, with little to distinguish them from the mass of their fellows; today they are legendary heroes of two nations. One stride through the opal gates has carried Rockwell into the company of Koscusko and Lafayette. He is a man transfigured from an ordinary North Carolina boy into a martyr of liberty in the eyes of the French, and into the coin in which we have paid Lafayette in the eyes of his own countrymen.
There will be those who will assert that after all he was merely an adventurous youngster whom love of excitement carried into war. That is as it may be, but it is well to remember that so late as 140 years ago there was the spirit that was expected of every well-born youth; and their own country regarded the Frenchmen and the Pole whose memories America honors as actuated by much the same motives. The fact remains that when he decided to fight it was France that Rockwell chose to fight for; and France cannot forget.
In years to come when old men who fought in the war of 1916 grope back in their memories for the outstanding incidents of the collision to which Verdun has given its name, they may forget how many thousands of guns were employed, they may forget the fury of the assaults, they may forget how many of their own countrymen lie buried on the field; but they will remember that among the dead were two young foreigners, come of their own free will out of democratic America to fight for democratic France. Living, Rockwell and Chapman were only two adventurous youths; dead they are links that bind more closely the two greatest republics in the world. Living, they accomplished only microscopic things in the elemental struggle about them; dead, they have accomplished what all the kaiser’s men and all the kaiser’s guns in 25 months have not been able to do. They have made France to bow her head.
Ah, well they are gone—dead, and yet not mourned, indeed, not missed. For in their going they have left a thing infinitely greater than themselves—a tradition of heroic proportions that shall only increase as the years go buy.
“For history’s hushed before them,
And legend flames afresh,
Verdun, the name of thunder,
Is written on their flesh.”
Is written on their flesh.”
Kiffin Rockwell of Asheville, Flying Ace with French Foreign Legion, Died Sept. 25, 1916
“Young Rockwell
Fell Where He Won Glory,” from the Hickory
Daily Record, Sept. 25, 1916. I found this and another story about Kiffin Rockwell after my post about him on Sept. 22, 2016. To see photos of Rockwell and his grave in France, go to that day's post.
Paris, Sept. 25—The
aerial fight in which Sergeant Kiffin Rockwell of Asheville and Atlanta was
mortally wounded yesterday morning by a German airman, took place over the town
of Thann. The body of the American aviator fell in reconquered territory in
Alsace near the spot where Rockwell shot down his first adversary five months
ago.
Rockwell was
serving as a volunteer in the Franco-American flying corps on the Verdun front.
A few hours previous to the engagement he had been promoted to the rank of
second lieutenant but died without knowing of the new honor. He already had
received the military medal for shooting down a German two-seater near
Hartsman-Weilerlopf in May. He had another before Verdun and had participated in
a thrilling combat in which nearly all the Franco-American flotilla was engaged
with a strong German force. He was wounded during the fight by a fragment of
shell while engaged alone with three adversaries.
Sergeant Rockwell
was one of the first American volunteers to join the French Foreign Legion. He
was grievously wounded in a bayonet attack at Arras in May, 1915, before being
transferred to the flying corps. He was regarded in French aviation circles as
an “ace,” a name given to the most skillful, daring pilots.
Personal News From Town and Country in the Watauga Democrat, Sept. 21, 1916
“Town and Country,” news
from Boone and Wataga County, from the Watauga Democrat, Sept. 21, 1916
--Quite
considerable frost yesterday morning.
--Some much-needed
work is being done on our streets just now.
--Mr. W.T. Blair is
spending a few days with his daughter, Mrs. Will McGuire at Brookside.
--Mr. Lewis of Ashe
County spent Sunday at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Dr. Salmons in Boone.
--Mr. Stanbury is
in Greensboro this week attending a meeting of the Educational Board of the two
conferneces of the M.E. Church South.
--Three of my town
lots just sold—a number of beautiful ones yet to select from. Don’t forget that
Boone is the coming town. See ad elsewhere.—A.D. Blair.
--Mr. Don Long, son
of Mr. and Mrs. G.R. Long of Lockhart, Florida, is visiting at the home of his
uncle, Mr. G.A. Hodges, near the village.
--Mrs. David R.
Shearer, accompanied by Mrs. M.P. Critcher and children, left Sunday for
Butler, Tenn., where they will visit Mrs. Shearer’s parents for a few days.
--Mr. T.B. Moore of
the Watauga Printing Company has moved his outfit to his home at the Blair
Hotel. Office in last room on the first floor going east. Call on him for neat
job work.
--Rev. M.L.
Carpenter, pastor of this charge, left Monday morning for Statesville, where he
went to attend the Lutheran Conference, which convenes in that town today.
--We are asked to
announce that there will be a box supper at Buckwheat school house on the
evening of Oct. 6th. There will also be given a well-prepared play
by the children of the school. Proceeds to be used for school purposes.
--Mrs. Wilfong of
Newnon, mother of our former countryman, Mr. W.W. Willfong, now of Henderson,
returned to her home last week after a rather extended visit to friends in the
Vilas section.
--The Appalachian
Training School is anxious to know the number and location of all the
old-fashioned looms in Watauga county and it will be greatly appreciated if
anyone who owns or knows of one will notify I.G. Greer at Boone at an early
date.
--Mrs. Nellie Price
of Raleigh, who is Domestic Science Inspector for the State, sent out by the
Board of Internal Improvements, spent several days last week in town looking
over that department of the Appalachian Training School.
--The anniversary
of the Literary Societies of the Appalachian Training School will be held in
the auditorium of the school on next Monday evening at 7:30. The program
promises to be an interesting one and the public generally is invited to
attend.
--The train on the
railroad leading to Shulls Mills crossed the county line on Monday of last
week, and for the first time ever the scream of the railroad locomotive was
heard in Watauga from her own trackage. The construction work is being
vigorously pressed, and the “iron horse” is expected to reach Foscoe within the
next few days. Then on down to Shulls Mills in the very near future, when the
company will begin at once the installing of its massive machinery for the
manufacture into lumbr of its fine timber holdings on Boone Fork.
--The first session
of the Sunday School Normal Institute will be held in Boone on Thursday
evening, sept. 21, at 7 o’clock. There will then be services Friday and
Saturday following, to meet from 9:30 a.m., and 3:30 and 7:30 p.m. All invited.
--Don’t forget the
Masonic picnic to be held in Boone on Saturday of next week. It is also very
important to bring a well-filled hamper to help out with the “spread.” The
program is not yet out, but you are assured of a pleasant day if you attend.
--Hats off to the
good county of Wilkes! $250,000 for road building has been voted by those
public-spirited people, despite the fact that only 60 days ago the county was
almost ruined by high water. When, oh, when, will Watauga bestir herself along
this important line?
--As a result of
the 10 days meeting conducted at Willowdale, 16 were received into that church
by baptism yesterday, a number of them being heads of families. Rev. Mr. Adams,
who held the revival, says in some respects, it was the most wonderful meeting
he has ever been in.
--Dr. R.H. Hardin
of Pineville came up last Thursday and remained until Monday, leaving in the
morning for Shulls Mills, where he went on duty as physician for the Whiting
Lumber Company, a position well worthwhile. Mrs. Hardin and their little son
will arrive in the near future, and they will locate there. Glad to have the
talented young physician among us again.
--Mrs. Alice M.
Councill of Hickory, who is known and loved by all the older set in Wetauga, is
spending a while at the home of her nephew, Mr. Jas. D. Councill. Last Thursday
she, in company with her son, Judge Councill, and daughter, Mrs. Emma Taylor,
and her son, David, and grandsons, Dr. W.C. Boyden of China Grove and Mrs.
Donald Boyden, who is in the automobile business at Knoxville, Tenn., met at
the old home in Boone and spent the day there, having the yards cleaned, the
furniture in the building rearranged, etc. The day was a happy one for them,
and it was indeed a pleasure to our people to see so many members of the
splendid family in our midst at the same time.
--Mrs. Roby Green
of Seattle, Wash., after spending a few days with her father-in-law, Mr.
Richard Greene, left yesterday morning for her far western home. She spent some
time on her way here among the haunts of her childhood home in Pennsylvania and
will be there a few days on her return. She is a supporter of President Wilson,
and says she must get through her visits en route in time to reach her
destination by Nov. 6, that she may cast her vote for him. She is an
interesting talker along political lines, and predicts a sweeping victory for
Wilson in November. She leaves delighted with Watauga and her people, and they
in turn were delighted to have her with them for even so short a time.
Saturday, September 24, 2016
Farmers Form Vance County Tobacco Growers’ Association, 1905
From The Gold Leaf of Henderson, September 14, 1905
The farmers of Vance county held a meeting in the court house here Saturday for the purpose of organizing the Vance County Tobacco Growers’ Association. It was a large and enthusiastic gathering, representative of the intelligence, character and backbone of the agricultural interests of the county. The court house was full, very few seats being unoccupied.
Z.T. Garrett was elected chairman and A.C. Hoyle secretary. Addresses were made by S.C. Adams of Red Oak, Va., president of the Interstate Tobacco Growers’ Association of Virginia and North Carolina, J.H. Sharp of Intelligence, Rockingham county, who is doing effective work throughout the State in the cause of organization, and C. Gordon of Union Level, Va., The speeches were of a high order, full of vigor and earnestness and were enthusiastically received.
After the speaking an organization was affected with the following named officers:
President—George W. Wright
Vice-president—I.M. Green
Secretary—A.C. Hoyle
Treasurer—W.B. Daniel
Executive Committee—J.F. Coghill, Z.T. Garrett, H.T. Shanks
Z.T. Garrett was elected delegate to the Interstate meeting to be held at Danville, Va., next Friday week.
The farmers of Vance county held a meeting in the court house here Saturday for the purpose of organizing the Vance County Tobacco Growers’ Association. It was a large and enthusiastic gathering, representative of the intelligence, character and backbone of the agricultural interests of the county. The court house was full, very few seats being unoccupied.
Z.T. Garrett was elected chairman and A.C. Hoyle secretary. Addresses were made by S.C. Adams of Red Oak, Va., president of the Interstate Tobacco Growers’ Association of Virginia and North Carolina, J.H. Sharp of Intelligence, Rockingham county, who is doing effective work throughout the State in the cause of organization, and C. Gordon of Union Level, Va., The speeches were of a high order, full of vigor and earnestness and were enthusiastically received.
After the speaking an organization was affected with the following named officers:
President—George W. Wright
Vice-president—I.M. Green
Secretary—A.C. Hoyle
Treasurer—W.B. Daniel
Executive Committee—J.F. Coghill, Z.T. Garrett, H.T. Shanks
Z.T. Garrett was elected delegate to the Interstate meeting to be held at Danville, Va., next Friday week.
Friday, September 23, 2016
Newspaper Calls for Home Demonstration Agent To Teach Scientific Canning, 1916
“Scientific Canning,” from the French Broad Hustler, Hendersonville, N.C., September 21, 1916.
The time for untrained hands and minds is past, and today the only work that is really profitable and acceptable is that of those who have the proper training and have learned to do their work in a scientific manner.
The government and the individual State gives away lots of valuable information and a town or county is negligent in failing to give its people every advantage if it does not bring these helps to the people. The farm demonstrator and the scientific fruit and vegetable canner and preserver are great helps which should be brought in reach of those who need this association.
In a county in a neighboring state a very delightful occasion was made of the fruit and vegetable canning demonstration. This part of the farm and home work was particularly of interest to the women. So the women in the county seat invited all the tomato club girls to town that day and entertained in their homes those who lived too far to return. An expert from the agricultural college was invited to talk to them on the real science of canning and keeping fruit and vegetables. Then the county demonstrator showed them exactly how to can tomatoes and beans, etc., and preserve their natural flavor and food value. Also how to make jelly, just what chemical process the fruit juices must go through, making it all so clear that there need be no failure in jelly making.
One of the old house keepers said she had made jelly all her life but these new methods had taught her a great deal and she felt there was no occasion to fail now.
There were also arrangements made for selling the canned tomatoes and other produce the country people would put up. One woman’s club in town promised to buy so many dozen cans of tomatoes from these girls in their county. The girls were very much encouraged and went away not only inspired to do more and better work, but with a real knowledge of the work they were trying to do. So much for the help that can be given by the State if enough people are only enterprising enough to go after it and bring it in reach of those whom it will most benefit. Food stuff and all that is grown and prepared on the farm is needful to everybody and it is essential that these products be brought to the greatest perfection and anything that aids in their growth and preservation is a help to mankind.
The time for untrained hands and minds is past, and today the only work that is really profitable and acceptable is that of those who have the proper training and have learned to do their work in a scientific manner.
The government and the individual State gives away lots of valuable information and a town or county is negligent in failing to give its people every advantage if it does not bring these helps to the people. The farm demonstrator and the scientific fruit and vegetable canner and preserver are great helps which should be brought in reach of those who need this association.
In a county in a neighboring state a very delightful occasion was made of the fruit and vegetable canning demonstration. This part of the farm and home work was particularly of interest to the women. So the women in the county seat invited all the tomato club girls to town that day and entertained in their homes those who lived too far to return. An expert from the agricultural college was invited to talk to them on the real science of canning and keeping fruit and vegetables. Then the county demonstrator showed them exactly how to can tomatoes and beans, etc., and preserve their natural flavor and food value. Also how to make jelly, just what chemical process the fruit juices must go through, making it all so clear that there need be no failure in jelly making.
One of the old house keepers said she had made jelly all her life but these new methods had taught her a great deal and she felt there was no occasion to fail now.
There were also arrangements made for selling the canned tomatoes and other produce the country people would put up. One woman’s club in town promised to buy so many dozen cans of tomatoes from these girls in their county. The girls were very much encouraged and went away not only inspired to do more and better work, but with a real knowledge of the work they were trying to do. So much for the help that can be given by the State if enough people are only enterprising enough to go after it and bring it in reach of those whom it will most benefit. Food stuff and all that is grown and prepared on the farm is needful to everybody and it is essential that these products be brought to the greatest perfection and anything that aids in their growth and preservation is a help to mankind.
Thursday, September 22, 2016
Asheville Volunteer in Franco-American Flying Corps Killed on Verdun Front, 1916
“Asheville Man Killed in Battle in France,” from the French Broad Hustler, Hendersonville, N.C., September 28, 1916. As I typed in this story, I wondered about the young man who had volunteered in France, and I fonnd this picture on Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiffin_Rockwell). At the outbreak of war, Kiffen and his brother Paul enlisted in the French Foreign Legion.
Kiffin Yates Rockwell
Kiffin Rockwell of Asheville, one of the most expert birdmen
serving with the French aviation corps, was killed Saturday during an
engagement with enemy airships. Announcement of his death was contained in a
brief cablegram sent to his mother, Mrs. Loula Ayres Rockwell at Winston-Salem,
and transmitted by her to Miss Agnes Rockwell, a sister of the dead airman, who
is at present at the Rockwell home on Hillside Street, Asheville.
An Associated Press dispatch from Paris dated Sunday says
the aerial fight in which Rockwell was mortally wounded by a German airman took
place over the town of Thann. The body of the America aviator fell in the
re-conquered territory in Alsace, near the spot where Rockwell shot down his
first adversary five months ago. Rockwell was serving as a volunteer in the
Franco-American flying corps on the Verdun front. A few hours previous to the
engagement he had been promoted to the rank of second lieutenant, but died without
knowing of the new honor. He already had received the military medal for
shooting down a German two-seater near Hartmans-Wellerkopf in May. He had
beaten down another before Verdun and had participated in a thrilling combat in
which nearly all the Franco-American flotilla was engaged with a strong German
fore. He was wounded during the fight by a fragment of shell while engaged
alone with three adversaries.
This image is from http://roadstothegreatwar-ww1.blogspot.com/2015/11/remembering-veteran-kiffen-rockwell-of.html. You will find more information on Kiffin Rockwell at that location.
Wednesday, September 21, 2016
'Talk of the Town' in Henderson, N.C., 1905
“Talk of the Town” from The Gold Leaf of Henderson, September 14, 1905
Mr. R.A. Crockett, former chief of police, has gone to
Franklin, Pa., to take a position in that city.
Mrs. Clifford Massenburg of Hampton, Va., is visiting her
sister, Mrs. I.P. Stainback, in Henderson.
Mrs. J.E. Wearn of Charlotte is visiting her parents,
Captain and Mrs. J.T. Elmore, in Henderson.
Misses Mary and Belle Bullock of Williamsboro were here
yesterday going to Charlotte where they have secured positions.
Mr. Gus Roth, wife and children left yesterday for New York,
Mr. Roth to buy new goods and Mrs. Roth to visit relatives.
Miss Ethel Dorsey has returned from a pleasant visit of two
weeks among relatives and froends at Houston and South Boston, Va.
The Richmond Times-Dispatch expresses the opinion that when
oysters arrive it is time for straw hats to take their winter vacation.
Miss Irene Betts has returned from a two months’ stay in the
Western part of the State spent at Asheville and elsewhere in the mountain
region.
Mr. Clifford Bullock left yesterday for New Haven, Conn.,
after spending a month with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. R.A. Bullock of
Williamsboro.
Mrs. R.P. Watson and children of Wilson, who stopped in
Henderson to spend a few days with relatives on their return trip from the
Western part of the State, left for their home Friday.
Mr. A.S. Johnston of Raleigh has taken a position as drug
and prescription clerk at Dorsey’s drug store, succeeding Mr. Webb who returned
to Roxboro to engage in business for himself.
Misses Jennie and Junie Dunn have returned from a two weeks’
trip to West Virginia and Ohio. Their brother, Capt. Joe Dunn, of the Norfolk
& Western Railroad, gave them the trip and they enjoyed it greatly.
A good seven-room house and lot situated on the corner of
Chestnut and Horner streets is offered for sale cheap on easy terms. Size of
the lot 100 x 200 feet. For further particulars apply to E.L. Haskins or J.L.
Currin.
Mrs. Sue Williams of Oxford came over last Thursday to
attend the meeting of the Woman’s Missionary Circle of the Presbyterian church
and spent the night with Mrs. Rosa Bryan. Mrs. Williams is president of the
Circle in Oxford.
The granolithic sidewalk in front of the court house is a
big improvement, one in which every citizen and tax payer of the county has a
proprietary interest and pride. The County Commissioners are to be commended
for having this work done.
Returning from New York, where she had been to buy a new
stock of millinery goods for the firm she is with, Miss Lottie Stainback
stopped over in Henderson last week to spend a few days with the family of her
uncle, Mr. L.D. Stainback, before going to Albemarle.
Capt. J.S. Poythress has bought a new outfit for sawing wood
and is better equipped for the business than ever before. He will also have a
machine for splitting wood in operation and will thus be in position to furnish
his customers with wood ready for the stove when it reaches their house.
Miss Marie Manning went to Durham yesterday to take a course
at the Conservatory of Music, which under the direction of Prof. Gilmour Ward
Bryant and a strong faculty has won a high place among the foremost
institutions of the kind in the south. Mrs. Manning went with her and will
return today.
The handsome 14 light oil lamp chandelier heretofore used in
the Presbyterian church is offered for sale. In perfect condition with new
burners and practically as good as new. Cost originally $100 but a sacrifice bargain
may be had in it by some church or public hall. Apply to J.R. Rankin at Samuel
Watkins’ store or at this office.
Mr. J.H. Daniel has gone North this week to buy new goods
and post himself on the condition of the hardware market. No man watches the market
more closely or keeps himself better informed as to prices, and this is one of
the secrets of Daniel & Co’s success in the hardware business and the low
prices at which they are enabled to sell goods.
The Insurance Department of Citizens Bank in changing its
advertisement this week calls your attention to one of the many ways—lamp
explosions—dwelling houses are destroyed by fire. This agency represents a
strong line of fire-tried, conflagration-proof companies, and can protect you
against any such loss. See Mr. James W. Horner, manager, and talk the matter
over with him.
Mrs. John S.E. Young and “little Jack” arrived last Thursday
to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Stephens, and will be here a month or
two. Lieut. Young, who is stationed at Jefferson Barracks, Mo., near St. Louis,
is well, and his friends hope he may be able to come out and give them the
pleasure of a cordial handshake and sight of his soldierly physiognomy while
Mrs. Young is here.
Some of the ladies are finding amusement and exercise in the
bowling alley. In order to meet the wishes of those who desire to play, Mr.
Strickland decided to set apart certain afternoons—Mondays and Fridays, from 4
to 9 o’clock—for the special benefit of ladies and their escorts. No others are
allowed the use of the alleys when the ladies are bowling and undesirable
spectators are prohibited.
Mrs. Edwin Stephens went to Raleigh Friday and when she
returned on the sho-fly train that evening, Liza, the polite and attentive maid
at the waiting rooms, wanted to send her on to Oxford. Mrs. Stephens says she
goes away on the train so seldom that she is not recognized when she comes
back, but Liza excused herself by saying she was “so dressed up and looked so
‘purty’ she didn’t know her.”
Mr. B.W. Spencer, who has been telegraph operator at the
Southern Railway station here for several years, left yesterday morning
accompanied by his wife and child for Winder, Ga., which place they will make
their home, he having been appointed operator of the Seaboard Air Line Railway
at that place. Mr. and Mrs. Spencer leave many friends in Henderson and there
is regret at their going away.
Put your business cares aside for one day and make the
advent of the Great Van Amburg Show a holiday. The only big show coming this
year, coming on its own special trains and will pitch tents in Henderson on
Saturday, Sept. 23rd. Don’t fail to see the grand free street parade
in the forenoon.
The Graded Schools opened Monday with an increased
attendance. At the central school there were 45 more than last session while
the number at both the cotton mills was also larger, as was the case with the
colored school. Altogether there are 150 or 175 more children in school within
Henderson township this session than there were last term, and the enrollment
on the opening day is never as great as it is later on. This is a gratifying
indication. It shows that the community is growing and increasing the
population and that people are taking more interest in sending their children
to school.
Mrs. Edward N. Fuller and son, Alwyn Eccles Fuller of
Burkley, Va., who have been visiting friends in Henderson are now on a visit to
Mrs. John MacMillan, have been joined by Mr. Fuller, who is enjoying at Mrs.
MacMillan’s his first vacation in six years. Mr. Fuller met Miss Cora Eccles,
one of the most popular and becoming young ladies of Vance county, at Mrs.
MacMillan’s about seven years ago, and after a short but persistent wooing,
induced Miss Eccles to change her name. Mr. Fuller is in charge of the
extensive foreign and domestic shipping and shipping insurance interests of the
Fosburgh Lumber Company, a prominent lumber manufacturing concern in the North
Carolina pine industry.
Capt. J.T. Elmore, road master of the First Division of the
Seaboard Air Line Railway, has been appointed General Road Master of the entire
system. He will have jurisdiction of 2,700 miles of trackage and will report
direct to the General Superintendent. This is a new office and the promotion is
a deserved one. Capt. Elmore is a capable and experienced railroad man—one of
the best in his line of business—and stands high in the estimation of his
superior officers. The promotion came to him unsought, merit alone counting in
his favor.
Capt. J.W. Dempsey, road master of this division, with headquarters
in Petersburg, will succeed Capt. Elmore. His headquarters will be in
Henderson. Another good man the recognition of whose worth signalized by his
promotion is gratifying to his friends.
Monday, September 19, 2016
Anna Clarkson, Pitcher, Leads Team to Victory Against Boys, 1921
A Girl Baseball
Pitcher,” from the High Point Review,
June 23, 1921
Much is being said in the newspapers about the achievement
the other day of the pitcher on a New York city high school girls’ baseball
team. The girls played a team of boys of the school, and the pitcher, Anna
Clarkson by name, did not yield a single hit and lead her team to a great and
glorious victory.
Some people may claim that the boys were poor batters, or
that they were unusually gallant. The suggestion has been made that the girl is
unusually pretty, and that the boys kept their eyes on her instead of trying to
keep it on the ball.
But we refuse to believe anything of the kind. We are going
to believe that Anna is a phenomenal young baseball pitcher, and we are also
going to hope that she will make a big league team in time if she wants to do
so.
Sunday, September 18, 2016
Rufus Suite Shoots and Kills the Wrong Man, 1910
From the Caucasian and Raleigh Enterprise, September 8, 1910
Durham, N.C., Sept. 6—Deputy W.P. McDade of Hillsboro, who
came here to-day for Walker Calvin Hendrix, charged with burglary, brought the
story of a homicide in which Ed Garrett died as the result of being shot by
Rufus Suite.
The murder is made all the more deplorable by reason of the
fact that Suite shot the wrong man. It occurred yesterday afternoon near a
spring, eight miles from Hillsboro. An old feud between Suite and another
Garrett, a cousin of the victim, resulted in the resumption of trouble. Yesterday
when Suite singled out his supposed victim, he fired squirrel shot into his
body, causing death 20 hours later. He has surrendered.
Saturday, September 17, 2016
Marriage Licenses Issued, From the Rockingham Post-Dispatch, 1919
“Marriage
Licenses,” from the front page of the Rockingham Post-Dispatch, Sept. 4, 1919
Aug. 30—Sydney Prevard and Josephine Grady, colored.
Aug. 30—David Ellerbe and Ella May Robinson, colored.
Sept. 1—Lewis Brown and Nellie Ormsby, white.
Sept. 1—Joseph McKay and Charlotte D. Leak, colored.
Sept. 2—Wilson Little and Judy Terry, colored.
Sept. 2—William Little Covington and Effie Lee Baldwin, white.
Aug. 30—Sydney Prevard and Josephine Grady, colored.
Aug. 30—David Ellerbe and Ella May Robinson, colored.
Sept. 1—Lewis Brown and Nellie Ormsby, white.
Sept. 1—Joseph McKay and Charlotte D. Leak, colored.
Sept. 2—Wilson Little and Judy Terry, colored.
Sept. 2—William Little Covington and Effie Lee Baldwin, white.
Friday, September 16, 2016
New Tobacco Barn in Fuquay Springs, 1935
New tobacco barn put to good use in Fuquay Springs, N.C., September, 1935. This photo is part of the national Library of Congress' collection of historic photos, which can be viewed online.
In 1905 You Could Check Your Baby While You Shopped
From the Raleigh Times,
September 1905
It’s bad enough to get one’s baggage mixed up in a checking
room, but there can be worse mix-ups. In a big department store in a Northern
city a batch of dear babies were checked and tended while bargain hunting
matrons hied and shied and vied. Two of the little ones overturned things by
climbing out of their perambulators, and when the mamas handed in checks there
was a mad crying of “not my baby!”
This recalls an incident many years ago in Lincoln county.
There were two fine babies who could only be known after baptism by a red and a
blue ribbon. At bath time they got mixed, and to this day t’other does not know
himself from which, nor did the parents through a lifetime.
Thursday, September 15, 2016
Kilgore and Laughinghouse Try to Convince Farmers of Benefits of Cotton Warehouses, 1922
From the Rockingham Post-Dispatch, Richmond County, September 7, 1922
Dr. B.W. Kilgore addressed about 125 farmers and business
men in the courthouse on Saturday afternoon, Sept. 2nd, on
Cooperative Cotton Marketing. Dr. Kilgore briefly reviewed the principles of
the Association and related the successes attending its operations in Europe,
California and in four cotton states last year, stating that Arizona, Oklahoma,
Texas and Mississippi realize (over outside sales) a nice profit last year for
cotton sold through the cooperative associations in these states. Eight cotton
states have organized and have federated to sell 3 million bales of cotton this
season. These eight states produce 80 per cent of the cotton in the world, said
Dr. Kilgore.
At places where the association has warehouses the
association began to receive cotton Sept. 1st. Thus far warehouses
have been offered the association in this county at Ellerbe, Rockingham,
Hoffman and Mt. Gilead. These warehouses will be ready to receive cotton as
soon as approval of the association can be made.
The audience was informed that financing the association was
the smallest job in it. The local banks of the State so far as consulted
agreeing to cooperate. The Wachovia Bank & Trust Co. of Winston-Salem
agreeing to furnish $100,000, this being the largest sum thus far pledges by
any one bank.
Dr. Kilgore states that the hardest job in the association
was to get the farmers to go into it. He remarked that he now feels somewhat as
the parents of the 12th child in the family: “I wouldn’t take
anything for the individuals of the family, but wouldn’t go through it all
again for any consideration.”
At the close of the address by Dr. Kilgore, the writer
introduced Mr. W.M. Laughinghouse, Field Agent for the Association in this
territory. Mr. Laughinghouse stated that he was here to help organize the
community associations among the members and to sign up additional members by
their assistance, and in every way possible assist the membership in the
smoothest possible local functioning of the association. He told the audience
that cotton would be received in this county just as soon as local arrangements
can be consummated for the handling, and that all members will be promptly
notified of such readiness to accept cotton.
The writer insisted that the profits at the sales end of
cotton production will make no man rich unless he makes a profit also at the
producing end. As a means of accomplishing the latter, he urged soil building
through diversification with hairy vetch and velvet beans as the best legumes
for this section.
--W.H. Barton
Wednesday, September 14, 2016
News Across North Carolina, Sept. 8, 1910
“State News” from the Caucasian and Raleigh Enterprise, September 8, 1910
Heavy rains last week worked havoc at Asheville. The
electric light plant was put out of business, the streets were flooded and in
some places completely gutted, and for two days train service was completely
held up.
--Chief of Police Russell of Raeford has been acquitted in
the Superior Court at Fayetteville of killing a negro whom he had arrested for
a minor crime and who attempted to escape. The State asked for a second degree
verdict.
--Car Inspector W.T. Hogue was killed in the Southern
Railway yards at Spencer last week, his body being frightfully mangled. He was
standing between two cars when an engine backed them together, catching him
between the bumpers.
--Robert Carney, white, janitor of the Southern building at
Wilmington, fell down the elevator shaft and sustained injuries that may result
in his death. His little child was a witness to the accident and summoned help.
--The tobacco market has shown up well, prices being higher
than they were for a similar period last year, and equaling the high prices of
two years ago. Growers were expressing great satisfaction. Most of the leaf now
coming in is of inferior quality. The crop is late.
--A baby, living but two hours after birth, the child of
William Burgess of Durham, has been the cause of considerable comment to-day.
The child has a single eye with small eyes combined in it and place for nose
far above it. Such anomaly has not been seen by doctors.
--During a terrific electric storm which passed over the
southern section of Rowan County Saturday afternoon, Ferrie Gibson, colored,
aged 19 years, was instantly killed by lightning. While the storm was severe no
other fatalities are reported, though it is said much damage was done to
growing crops.
--It was Capt. J.G. Hollingsworth of Fayetteville who was
injured in the auto accident at Richmond Friday morning, instead of C.J.
Hollingsworth, as stated in the special from Richmond. Captain Hollingsworth is
a popular military officer, and it will be gratifying to his friends to learn
that he will recover.
--Capt. James Ireland of the little schooner Amelia, laden
with a general cargo, came into port at Beaufort from Norfolk, having sailed
the vessel home without any crew. When he removed the hatches it was found the
vessel had leaked, causing $500 damage to the uninsured goods.
--A petition is being circulated and freely signed asking
Judge Boyd of the Federal court to set aside the verdict in the case of Mr.
Craft and N. Glenn Williams, both having been convicted at a recent term of
court at Greensboro on the charge of conspiracy to defraud the government in
the post office at Williams, Yadkin County.
--Mrs. Thomas P. Wilcox, wife of the ex-Sheriff of
Pasquotank County, and mother of Jim Wilcox, who is now serving 30 years in the
State penitentiary for the murder of Nelle Cropsey, died at Elizabeth City last
Friday afternoon. Mrs. Wilcox had been ill for some months and has been a great
sufferer. The principal cause of death, it is said, was a mother’s grief over
the plight of a wayward son.
--After much criticism on the part of the state press,
Willie Medlin, the crazed would-be suicide, has been admitted to the State
Hospital for the Insane. The authorities there at first refused to receive her,
alleging there was no room, in spite of the fact that a half of the million
dollars has been expended on these institutions during the past few years. The
unfortunate woman has been confined for weeks in the common jail at Raleigh.
--Editor John M. Julian of the Salisbury Post is very ill
with pellagra. Mr. Julian is one of the ablest newspaper men in the State, and
his serious condition is a matter of great regret to his many friends.
Monday, September 12, 2016
Raleigh Detective Tom Crabtree Killed in Line of Duty, 1922
From the editorial page of the Rockingham Post-Dispatch, Richmond County, September 7, 1922
One night last week Detective Tom Crabtree of the Raleigh
police force was shot down by a young white drunk, Charles Kluttz, who after
shooting once, jumped from his car and shot him again, then drove a heavy
Cadillac car over the body of the fallen officer. Crabtree died in the hospital
Saturday, and such was the crowd that desired to attend his funeral that it had
to be held in the huge city auditorium Sunday, 3,000 people attending.
At the
grave four white robed K.K.K. men placed a floral design on the grave, the
three capital letters emblazoned in red flowers on a background of white roses.
Scarcely had the officer died before a subscription was circulated over Raleigh
with the idea of raising $5,000 as a trust fund for his needy wife and
children.
The detective was in the discharge of his duty, and was shot
down by a drunken bully without a chance of protecting himself. His death,
however, will serve to awaken the Raleigh citizens to the necessity of a more
strict law enforcement—and it is but an object lesson to the people of ALL the
State to be vigilant in this respect, and wage an energetic campaign to stamp
out the liquor traffic.
Rockingham and Richmond county are doing this very
thing now and our people must stick behind the officers and let the blind tiger
and whiskey manufacturing element thoroughly understand that this kind of
business must stop!
Sunday, September 11, 2016
Why Is Selling Whiskey Okay for Church Member But Not Okay for Plain Sinner? 1905
From The Gold Leaf, Thursday,
Sept. 7, 1905.
We admit that there are many things we do not understand.
One is that we cannot see why whiskey selling is any more respectable when a
church member engages in it that it was when a plain sinner was selling it.
--Raleigh
Enterprise
Saturday, September 10, 2016
Newspaper Criticizes Booker T. Washington for Dining With White Family in New York, September 1905
From The Gold Leaf, Thursday,
Sept. 7, 1905.
Booker Washington explains his dining with John Wanamaker at
the hotel in Saratoga. He says he did not escort any members of the Wanamaker
family to the table, but that he did “dine with Mr. Wanamaker and his family at
the hotel at his request for the purpose of talking on a matter of business.”
At that time he says he was a guest at a colored hotel in Saratoga. Washington
says that on three other occasions in the last 15 years he has lived “at the
hotel where Mr. Wanamaker was.” Washington says: “When in the south I conform
like all colored people, to the customs of the South, but when in the North I
have found it necessary during the past 20 years to come into contact with
white people in the furtherance of my work in ways I do not in the South.”
In other words, Washington does not attempt to force social
equality with the white people of the South because he knows it will not be
allowed, but as soon as he gets across Mason’s and Dixon’s line, he drops his
own people as associates and practices that social equality against which he
preaches when at home.
Does Washington expect the negroes of the South to follow
his advice or his example? If the negroes who look to him for instruction and
guidance find him practicing social equality at the North will they not wish to
follow his example, and if they can not go North to put it into effect, they
will wish to try it in the south. If Washington really wants to aid his race,
he must forego association socially with white people at the North as well as
at the South.
Friday, September 9, 2016
Why Dr. Peacock Shot Police Chief Taylor, 1921
Did the previous post leave you wondering about the details of this
story? Here are some previous articles from North Carolina newspapers on the
shooting of the police chief by the doctor.
From the High Point Review, June 9, 1921
Fight for Life Now On
at Lexington….Mental Condition of Dr. J.W. Peacock Described at Trial
Several Witnesses
Testifying in Behalf of Thomasville Doctor Who Killed Chief Taylor Says He Was
in Strange Mental State on Morning of Tragedy
Lexington, June 6. Witnesses testifying here this afternoon
in behalf of Dr. J.W. Peacock of Thomasville, now on trial charged with the murder
of Chief of Police J.E. Taylor of Thomasville, April 16, declared that the
defendant on the morning prior to the tragedy was in a strange mental state;
that he was apparently suffering from burns on the top of his head, neck and
hands sustained while trying to get his two automobiles out of his barn which
was destroyed by fire at the early hour of the morning of April 16. Witnesses
for both sides asserted that Peacock, following the tragedy, said that he
killed Chief Taylor because he set fire to his barn.
The state offered the testimony of 10 witnesses, beginning
at 3 o’clock, and concluding at 4:40 o’clock. Those testifying were either at
or near the scene of the homicide. The state put before the jury of Rowan
citizens a clean-cut case showing that Chief Taylor met death at the hands of
the defendant, Dr. J.W. Peacock. The defense as soon as the state rested called
its witnesses and when court adjourned at 5:30 p.m. had examined a half dozen.
It will continue upon the convening of court tomorrow morning at 9:30 o’clock.
Exceptionally good progress was made today, the first day of the trial.
Varner First Witness
Andrew Varner, a world war veteran who was talking to Chief
Taylor when the first shot was fired, was the first witness for the state. Varner
said that he and Taylor were standing on Salem street on the opposite side of
the street from Peacock’s office, when the first shot was fired. He told of
hearing the report of a gun, and turning, saw blood flowing from the chif’s
face. He didn’t know who fired the shot. Taylor, said Varner, threw his hand up
to his chest, and slightly turning, hollered: “Oh!” he then went into Pearce’s
grocery store on Salem street. Varner declared that he decamped and didn’t see
the remaining parts of the tragedy.
Dr. Peacock’s
Testimony
The murderer of Chief Taylor, of Thomasville, gives his
testimony as follows:
“I first realized that I had been shooting and had killed
Taylor after I went to the telephone and attempted to call my wife,” said Dr.
Peacock. “The last thing I remember before the shooting was seeing John Lambeth
and Mr. Huff.”
The defendant did not know what happened, he said, when he
was in his office on the morning of the homicide.
Dr. Peacock testified that he contracted tuberculosis when
he was 21 years of age, but that his condition had improved. Last fall he was
stricken with influenza and since then his health had not been good, he said.
The defendant testified that he had no malice whatever
toward Chief Taylor.
“The first question that came up,” said the defendant was in
regard to increasing his salary. “I made a motion as a member of the council
that the chief’s salary be increased. Taylor was suspended by the mayor and at
the next meeting I seconded a motion that he be reinstated. That was some time
in March.”
“What did you subsequently do with regard to the chief?”
asked John J. Parker, of the defense.
“Later I made a motion at another meeting that the chief be
asked for his resignation. That was after we had investigated Mr. Taylor’s
record. There was nothing personal in it and I was absolutely sincere in making
the motion,” replied the witness.
“The next morning,” said Dr. Peacock, “Chief Taylor met me
and asked me why I had it in for him.”
Dr. Peacock said he had done what he had done as his duty as
an official of the town.
The defendant stated that several persons had been to him
and said the chief was evidently threatening him. Dr. Peacock also stated that
on Thursday before the killing F.C. Bivens informed him that Chief Taylor had
said “If I didn’t stop working against him I was going west and damn quick.”
Dr. Peacock testified that John Moore asked what the doctor
had done to Taylor, requesting that if anything had been done to stop it as the
chief threatened to break up the physician’s home.
The witness also swore on the stand that R.E. Zimmerman
informed him of one of Taylor’s alleged threats.
“I feared him worse than I did a rattlesnake,” said the
prisoner when questioned by his attorney.
“Knowing the man as I did I was afraid. I knew he was brave
enough to do anything he said he would do.”
-=-
Brutal Murder of
Brave Officer…Dr. Peacock Is Still in Jail to Await Hearing on His Sanity,” from
the High Point Review, June 16, 1921
The Hearing Will Take Place
Before Judge Finley at Lexington on June 28
Lexington, June 15—Dr. J.W. Peacock, who was found “not
guilty” of murder Saturday night by a jury of Rowan county citizens on the grounds
that he was insane at the time he killed Chief of Police J.E. Taylor of
Thomasville, remains in his cell at the county jail to await the hearing on his
mental condition at the present time, which will be held here before Judge T.B.
Finley on June 28.
The judge will then make a final ruling as to whether the
physician shall be committed to the criminal insane department of the state
penitentiary
Few big cases here have come to a less dramatic close. There
was no demonstration of any kind on the part of anyone when the jury announced
its verdict, except that when Dr. Peacock resumed his seat after standing up to
hear his fate his wife placed her arms around his neck and he held her in his
embrace for perhaps a minute. In the meantime, Judge Finley turned to the jury
and merely said: “Gentlemen of the jury, you are excused.”
When the jury came in and stated that they have arrived at
their verdict, they arose and in response to the predestined question: “What
say you?” they answered in unison, “Not guilty.” After the argument as to the
time of hearing about half an hour, court was adjourned and members of the jury
came over and shook hands with Dr. Peacock.
When Dr. Peacock entered the court room at 9 o’clock
Saturday night to hear the reading of the evidence of Dr. Isaac Taylor of
Morganton, which enabled the journey to soon agree, he supported Mrs. Peacock who
leaned heavily on his arm and appeared almost completely exhausted after a most
trying week. Other members of his family appeared, most too tired to display
emotion.
It was upon the testimony of the three alienists that Dr.
Peacock is now a paranoiac, coupled with that of a number of other physicians
who have known him for hears that they believed him insane at the time of the
act, that the jury returned a verdict holding him not guilty of murder. The
judge had charged the jury that they found the defendant to have been insane at
the time of the killing they should return the verdict as not guilty.
Many here are included to draw a sort of parallel between
the trial here and that of Harry K. Thaw, who was found not guilty on the plea
that he was a paranoiac. Of course, most of the elements entering into this
case are different from the famous New York case.
It is general conceded here by those to whom the verdict is
not pleasing that the jury did their duty as they saw it and that if they
accepted the large mass of testimony as to Dr. Peacock’s insanity no other
verdict could have been returned.
Some discussion hinges around the reports that Henry Shaver,
who was accidentally shot through the stomach by a bullet passing through
Taylor, and Mrs. J.E. Taylor, widow of the slain chief, had taken steps to
bring suits against Dr. Peacock for large sums of damages. In view of the fact
that the jury apparently held him to be insane at the time and incapable of
committing a crime, an interesting case has been brought up as to whether he
could commit a tort upon which damages might be recovered. The result of the
insanity inquisition before Judge T.B. Finley on June 28 may throw more light
up on this question.
-=-
From the Rockingham Post-Dispatch, June 16, 1921
Dr. J.W. Peacock was acquitted in Superior Court at
Lexington last week of the murder of the Thomasville Chief of Police, J.E.
Taylor. The experts, Doctors J.K. Hall, Isaac Taylor and Albert Anderson (the
same three who testified in the Foster Parsons trial here at Rockingham last
year) testified that Dr. Peacock was crazy at the time of the killing, and it
was on this testimony that the imported Rowan county jury acquitted the man. A
hearing will not be held on June 28th to determine whether Peacock
is insane at the present time; this coming hearing will decide whether he will
be committed to the insane department or turned loose.
Mrs. Ethel Taylor, widow of the slain man, has brought suit
against the estate of Dr. Peacock for $40,000 for damages. H.S. Shaver, who was
wounded by Peacock at the tie Taylor was killed, has also brought suit. He is
suing for $25,000. It is to be hoped that both will recover the full amounts.
To the lay mind it would seem that the acquittal of Peacock for this brutal
murder is an outrage on justice.
-=-
From the Elizabeth City Independent, June 17,
1921.
Mrs. Ethel B. Taylor, widow of Chief of Police J.E. Taylor,
who was shot and killed in Thomasville by Dr. J.W. Peacock, has instituted suit
against the physician for $40,000 as damages.
-=-
From the High Point Review, June 23, 1921
Lexington—At 10 o’clock p.m. the jury trying Dr. J.W.
Peacock charged with the murder of Chief of Police Taylor at Thomasville,
brought in a verdict of not guilty. The jury accepted the evidence of alienists
that Dr. Peacock was insane at the time Taylor was killed.
Ties Sheets Together To Escape Criminal Insane Department of State Prison, 1922
From the Rockingham Post-Dispatch, Richmond County, September 7, 1922
Raleigh, Aug. 30—Dr. J.W. Peacock, prominent physician of
Thomasville, escaped from the criminal insane department of the State Prison today
by sliding down a rope made of bed clothing, from his cell on the third floor
of the prison. Peacock was tried for the murder of Police Chief J.E. Taylor of
Thomasville and acquitted on the ground of insanity and was committed to the
insane department of the prison following the trial.
Peacock left a note addressed to the keeper of the
department of criminal insane saying, “I hate to leave on my vacation without
telling you good-bye.”
Supt. Pou immediately offered a reward of $400 for Peacock.
Thursday, September 8, 2016
Col. Edward Savage Latimer Dies, 1901
From Fisherman and Farmer,
Elizabeth City, Thursday, Sept. 5, 1901
Col. Edward Savage Latimer, a well-known and highly esteemed
citizen of Wilmington, died last evening at 6 o’clock at his home, 208 North
Third street, after a lingering illness of several months.
Only this week Col. Latimer returned from a sanitarium in
Baltimore, where he was under treatment of some of the most skilled physicians
in the country, but all in vain. He gradually grew worse after his arrival at
home and his death came not wholly unexpected, but as a shock to his family and
numerous friends here and elsewhere.
--Wilmington Star
Wednesday, September 7, 2016
Governor and School Superintendent Speak at Caswell County Fair, School Dedication, 1940
Caswell County school superintendent and Governor Hoey speak at the
Caswell County Fair in Yanceyville. Governor Hoey also attended the dedication
of the new building at Anderson School in September, 1940. The photos were
taken by Marion Post Wolcott in October, 1940. Wolcott was taking publicity
pictures for the U.S. Farm Security Administration. The photos are part of the collection
in the Library of Congress Prints & Photographs Division, Washington, D.C.
Monday, September 5, 2016
'Local Matters' in Wake County, 1910
“Local Matters” from The Caucasian and Raleigh Enterprise, Sept. 8, 1910
Monday being Labor Day, the Cen-Labor Union gave a most
enjoyable barbecue at the Fair Grounds, which was largely attended.
--Mr. H.C. Reece, who was shot by Jim Staley about two years
ago, was in the city Monday and visited the jail, where he recognized the
prisoner.
--Governor Kitchin has offered a reward for the capture of
Alma Rains, who shot and killed his wife near Apex last Saturday morning. Rains
has not been seen since the shooting, though it is not believed that he has
gone far.
--At the home of Mrs. Taylor on Martin Street, Mr. Thomas
Braxton Creel and Miss Bessie Tutney, both of this city, were united in
marriage Sunday night at 9 o’clock in the presence of a few intimate friends,
Mrs. William H. Sawyer performing the ceremony.
--Anthony Rogers, colored, was brought to Raleigh from near
Parker’s Store by Deputy Sheriff Harward. The deputy received a phone message
that the colored man was disturbing the neighbors, he being crazy. He was
lodged in the Wake County jail.
--Mr. Norfleet Stronach was arrested Saturday afternoon on a
warrant charging him with having sold whiskey to Will Bryant, a colored man
from the country. He gave bond in the sum of $100 for his appearance. When
arrested, Mr. Stronach denied the charge.
--Frank Chappelle and William B. Chappelle of New Light
Township were before United States Commissioner Nichols Tuesday charged with
operating an illicit distillery. After hearing the evidence they were required
to give bonds in the sum of $200 each for their appearance at the next term of
court.
--The funeral of Mrs. R.M. Furman, who passed away in
Washington Friday, was held in the Church of the Good Shepherd Saturday morning
at 10 o’clock, conducted by the pastor, Rev. I. McK. Pittenger, D.D. The Pall
bearers were Messrs. R.H. Battle, C.C. McDonald, R.C. Strong, F.T. Ward, Albert
L. Cox, and Prof. Hugh Morson.
--Mr. M.S. Holt, a Chatham County farmer, sold 223 pounds of
watermelon from a single vine.
--Edward S. Hodge, aged 64 years, and a well-known resident
of St. Matthews Township, died Sunday night at his home after a brief illness.
He was buried at the old family burying-ground on the old homestead Tuesday. He
was a brave Confederate soldier and a member of the largest land-holding and
former slave-owning families in the country. He was a generous, warm-hearted
man and friend.
Sunday, September 4, 2016
North Carolinian Reports on Strange Things He Saw in Philadelphia, 1905
From The Gold Leaf, Thursday,
Sept. 7, 1905. I wondered about Girard College after reading the story below,
so I looked it up. It is still in existence, but unlike most colleges, it also
educates needy children through 12th grade. The wall surrounding the
college still exists. If you are also curious, see http://www.girardcollege.com/page.cfm?p=359.
Things Seen and
Heard…On a Trip by One Who Travels With His Eyes and Ears Open
After some weeks at home it gives quite a novelty to life to
go into other States and communities and notice how they do things. It is
wonderful too to see the spirit of braggadocio that exists everywhere. O matter
where one goes he can find “the best in the world,” “the largest in the world”
and things galore that are “unparalleled.”
I was walking along on Chestnut street in Philadelphia on
Tuesday when a patriotic Pennsylvanian said to me, “There is the largest store
in the world.” I saw that it indeed was a very great building and that people
passed in and out of its doors, and along the aisles and up the elevators,
story after story, and down into its basements in such crowds and with such
fervor, that to conclude that shopping must be done there or nowhere, was
almost inevitable. Still I could not exactly repress a little doubt about its
being the very largest in the world. I had not gone five squares from that
place before I was shown another building, “the tallest in the world,” the
famous Washing monument being just a little taller. The greatest of everything
was there. Wm. Penn’s old home, just as he left it; Liberty Bell, crack and
all; and the building where the Declaration of Independence was signed. The
house, made of poles for Gen. Grant to live in near Richmond during a winter
campaign in the Civil War, has been taken down and restored exactly, in that
famous city of liberty lovers to be viewed by all who come as worthy of their
most patriotic adoration! It is almost treasonable not to go to Willow Grove
and see for yourself Valley Forge, and hear again recounted stories of the
bravery of the Revolutionary Fathers.
Girard College and the Girard estates can be seen
everywhere, for as rich as he was it is richer now because he could not take it
with him into the grave. Stephen Girard was called a philanthropist because he
gave his money to buy him a reputation and yet he gave the college with the
condition that “no ecclesiastic, missionary or minister of any sect whatever is
permitted to hold or exercise any station or duty in the college, or to be
admitted as a visitor within the premises.” There it stands with his high walls
looking as forbidding as a penitentiary.
A short walk from the tallest building, I came to “the
finest theatre in the world,” and so on until I was about to decide that I was
in the superlative city; but I took a sleeper that night and slept across the
State and awoke in Pittsburg. I had scarcely arrived before I was informed that
a circle around that place with a radius of 25 miles would enclose “the richest
place in the world” of any size. Just a few squares away I was suddenly called
upon to stop and behold “the largest store in the world!” I was bound to call a
halt by saying to my informant, who wanted me to go in and see the wonders,
that I had been to New York and Philadelphia and to the big store in Henderson.
I suppose they all told the truth, but truth is very much like some good old
tunes I used to know. They are still played but they are played nowadays with
variations. Imagine my feelings after I had been tired of turning up my nose at
the bragging Yankees and had let it down again to its normal position after
getting in Vance county, before I could get home I saw in big letters “the best
on earth,” and said by a Southern man.
Lest what I shall not relate may seem to be personal, if it
should come under the observation of whom it concerns, I will say that, as I
passed through Kamschatka a very masculine looking woman came into the car. Her
eyes, in color and gleam were very much like highly polished knife-blades. Her
jaws hanging down beside her ears warned one of danger. Her mouth shut together
like a steel trap except that it seemed to be tilted up at the corners at an
angle of about 45 degrees. She seemed to be physically as cool as a cucumber,
but I dare say her disposition stood at 96.8 degrees Fahrenheit. I saw no
sorrow in her face or manner, though I am sure from the signs of mourning on
her that that her husband, poor man, had gone to a better country, though I know
nothing of his life here, nor would I change the expression if I knew he had
been a bad man. The word “better,” you know, represents no absolute quality but
is a relative or comparative word. The lady in question, as soon as she came
in, seated herself occupying an entire seat. A man and his wife and two
children came in at the same time and the four sat opposite our heroine in one
seat. With a great effort at commiseration, she finally suggested that one of
her little ones might sit with her. It was a very hot, sultry day and nearly
every window in the car was open, as the heat was almost unendurable. A
gentleman came in at the next station and took a seat in front of her and began
to raise his window; but she soon squelched him, much to the amusement of the
passengers. Finally she moved her seat and got in front of me and wanted my
window down, but I explained to her that I was suffering from asthma and that
fresh air was an absolute essential to my happiness, and she must excuse me; so
stabbing me with her knife-like eyes she yielded the point, but first inquired
with an insinuating tone if I had ever travelled much? I replied that my
opportunities in that particular had been somewhat limited. I fear there was
some sarcasm in the reply. In a few minutes we rolled into the great station at
---- let us say Cairo.
There coffee and sandwiches were brought in for sale. I
took a sandwich and coffee. She took a sandwich and coffee. As soon as the odor
of her sandwich penetrated her olfactory nerve her nose turned up like the
nether end of a wasp preparing for battle and she said to me, “Mister, may I
throw this out of your window?” I said, “Certainly, Madam, as far as I am
concerned; but I think it would be a violation of the law to.” By that time she
seemed to have warmed to 96.9 degrees and threw the whole thing through my
window diagonally, half her sandwich landing in my coffee. To be thus deprived,
when there was no chance of getting another, somewhat spoiled my very affable
disposition, and I could not help telling her of my travels in several states
of American, and some little in Canada; but I had never hoped to see as much as
I had seen that day—that my experience with her was a new one and that I was
glad of it. She left the train in Borneo, which helps America that much. The
last I saw of her she was striding along with an air of “I can take care of
myself, sir,” and I hope she will confine her efforts to that direction.
One thing I have learned: No matter where one is, it is the
best place. I am reminded too that “Truth is stranger than fiction.” I am
beginning to believe that in the multiplication of novels and novelettes, it is
becoming more and more a stranger.
Saturday, September 3, 2016
Nash Jarrell Bitten by Rabid Dog, 1922
From the Rockingham Post-Dispatch, September 7, 1922
Nash Jarrell, 23-year-old son of Mr. W.C. Jarrell of
Roberdel No. 2, was bitten by a dog Tuesday. The dog was killed and its head
sent to Raleigh for examination. The report received was that the animal had
rabies. Dr. McIntosh is treating the young man at home, and no bad effects are
anticipated.
Friday, September 2, 2016
Elizabeth City Editorial Encourages Parents to Send Children to School, Help with Homework, 1905
Editorial from the Elizabeth City Tar Heel, September, 1905. School attendance was not compulsory. It also was not
free. Some children went for a couple of months of the year; others not at all.
Send Your Children to
School…And Having Done This Assist Them With Their Lessons…Don’t Leave the
Teacher to Do It All
Parents, this is for you. We do not know whether you are
accustomed to reading the editorials of this newspaper or not. If you have not
made it a practice to read our editorials we want you to read this one.
The month of September is a school month, the month that
children in this city blessed with nine months school terms, get their books
together and go to school. Are your children among the number who will enter
one of the several good schools in Elizabeth City this fall? If they are not,
whose fault is it?
This newspaper wants to impress upon those few of its
readers who may not too seriously consider the matter of education the
necessity of keeping their children in school and at their studies just as many
months in the year as they can.
The time is when the world demands educated workers in every
branch of industry. Without education a man is handicapped worse than he who
has no legs or no arms. You who in an advanced age, hair white, shoulders
stooped, working at hard labor for a dollar a day may appreciate this fact. Send
your children to school.
When you have had them enrolled in some good school, see to
it that they study. Don’t trust to their teachers to see that they learn their
lessons. Lessons must be learned out of school hours. A teacher has no control
over the pupil out of school. See that your children prepare the lessons
nights. Help them, take an interest in them and try each night to impress upon
them how much the little things they learn each day will count in after years
when they must get out from under the parental roof and work for their own
bread each day. Send your children to school.
By all means send your children to some school. Don’t count
the cost. Remember that you are responsible for these little ones’ existence
and responsible for their future welfare. If the cost of schooling looks large,
look to other expenses and see if some of them might not be reasonably cut.
Send your children to school.
Football Season, Liberty Magazine Cover, 1941
Liberty, a general interest weekly magazine, was second in popularity only to the Saturday Evening Post magazine. Liberty was first published in 1924 and folded in 1950.
Model Eileen Ford and a Cornell Big Red football player.
After World War II Eileen Ford formed the Ford Modeling Agency. Click on the
link to read about the Fords and their ground-breaking agency.
Thursday, September 1, 2016
Susie Pruett Baptized at Age 105 and Entire Church Worships Sunday at Her Home, 1922
From the Rockingham Post-Dispatch, Richmond County, September 7, 1922
One of the most unique baptisms that every took place in
America was that of a Cleveland county woman, Mrs. Susie Pruett, aged 105
years, who at the advanced age professed religion for the first time and
although crippled and unable to walk as a result of a fall sustained four
months ago, was baptized a few days ago by her friend, Rev. J.F. Weathers, who
is pastor of the Pisgah and other Baptist churches.
Around a thousand people were present at the unique event,
which took place in Cascar.
The baptizing itself was a most remarkable scene and
required unusual preparations. The aged convert, having professed religion,
stated that she wanted to be baptized by immersion. Her son, Mr. Joe Pruett,
with whom she lives, and other relatives and friends protested that it might
mean her death, as she was confined to her bed with a broken leg, badly
swollen, following her fall of a few months ago.
Mrs. Pruitt said she wanted to be baptized, even if it meant
her death and she should be taken from the pool a corpse. Rev. Weathers was in
quandary at her request, but determined to carry out her wishes.
Workmen constructed a square wooden vat. This was placed on
a truck and carried to Peeler’s mill pond, where the vat was filled with water.
When the vat was brought to the front steps of the Pruett home, hot water was
procured in pots and used to warm up the baptismal fount.
Then six strong men picked up Mrs. Pruitt in a sheet and
slowly lowered her into the pool. When her head was almost submerged, Mr.
Weathers performed the ceremony of baptism and the aged lady came out of the
water smiling and rejoicing at her experience, and none the worse for her
ordeal.
“Aunt” Susie Pruett was born in August, 1817. She is four
years older than Mr. Enoch Parkey, the county’s oldest man. She was married at
18, lived with her husband, David Pruett, over 43 years, and he has been dead
something over 43 years. Figure her age up for yourself.
She lived 105 years without joining any church, but after
her conversion and baptism last week, she was on Sunday afternoon admitted to
membership in Pisgah church, which adjourned to her home and admitted her into
full fellowship there.