In which Josephus Daniels trashes Samuel N. Hill for daring to claim that “a negro is not treated with justice in Wilson county.”
Wilson Advance, 27 July 1883.
In which Josephus Daniels trashes Samuel N. Hill for daring to claim that “a negro is not treated with justice in Wilson county.”
Wilson Advance, 27 July 1883.

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In the 1930 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: farmer Johnie Pate, 35; wife Florence, 37; and children Johnnie Jr., 14, Oscar, 9, and Clara, 5.
In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: John Pate, 44; wife Florence, 47, private housekeeper; and children John Jr., 14, W.P.A. laborer, Oscar, 17, and Clara, 15.
Oscar Lee Pate registered for the World War II draft in 1940. Per his registration card, he was born 29 December 1921 in Wilson County; lived at 113 South Carroll Street, Wilson; his contact was Florence Pate; and he worked for T.A. Loving & Company at the Marine Air Base at Cherry Point, North Carolina.
Image courtesy of Veterans of World War II Wilson County, spiral-bound volume, Wilson County Public Library.

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Paul Garfield Arrington registered for the World War II draft in Wilson County in 1942. Per his registration card, he was born 18 July 1920 in Sanford, Lee County, N.C.; lived at Route 2, Elm City; his contact was Ann Farmer; and he worked for B.H. High.
Image courtesy of Veterans of World War II Wilson County, spiral-bound volume, Wilson County Public Library.
Wilson Advance, 16 June 1892.
Judgment was suspended against Arthur Young, but James Eatman, Wiley Simms, and Mack Dozier were sentenced to serve two months in jail to be followed by a period in which jail officials could hire out their labor.
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In the 1900 census of Wilson, Wilson County: painter Mack Dozier, 60; wife Elibeth, 48; children Julia, 17, and Sid, 15; and mother Charlotte, 69.
Mack Dozier died in Richmond, Virginia, on 28 February 1905 at the City Almshouse. Per his death certificate, he was 64 years old; was born in Wake County, N.C.; was married; and worked as a painter.
Charlotte News, 25 June 1912.
Pharmacist D.C. Yancy lived in Rocky Mount prior to setting up shop in Wilson.
The 1860 slave schedule is the only known surviving, contemporaneous list of the men and women who enslaved black people in Wilson County. It is not a list of the enslaved themselves, as none are named in that census. Rather, the schedule described people by “color” (black or mulatto), sex, and age.
Organized by township, this series will set forth these enslavers, the number of people they held in 1860, and the ages of the youngest and oldest people held. Where possible, I will also name people known to be enslaved by each person. They may or may not correspond to the enslaved people described in the 1860 slave schedule. The paucity of such identifications is heartbreaking, and I continue to search.
Wilson district, which included the Town of Wilson and its immediate surrounds, was the southwestern end of Edgecombe County prior to 1855. The 1860 slave schedule lists 118 enslavers — far more than in any other township of Wilson County — the largest of whom were William Barnes, who held 79 people, and his brother Joshua Barnes, who held 67 people and controlled another 29 as a trustee for minor heirs.
B.H. [Benjamin H.] Bardin — 13, aged 1 to 30 years
B.H. Bardin, in trust — 8, aged 1 to 30 years
J.J. [Jesse J.] Bardin — 5, aged 7 to 60 years
Willie Daniel — 18, aged 6 months to 37 years
Albert Farmer — 2, aged 13 and 15 years
Westley Swift — 12, aged 1 to 37 years
W.G. Jordan — 13, ages 1 to 40 years
R.D. [Robert D.] Johnston — 8, ages 2 to 39 years
W.W. [Willie W.] Winstead — 1, age 15 years
B.B. Barnes — 2, ages 23 and 52 years
William M. Gay — 10, ages 8 to 60 years
William M. Gay, in trust — 11, ages 8 to 70 years
W.D. [Willie Daniel] Rountree — 5, ages 2 to 50 years
Moses Rountree — 4, ages 2 to 50 years
N.A.H. Godwin — 3, ages 10 to 30 years
Jesse D. Barnes — 6, ages 9 to 45 years
James D. Barnes — 35, ages 8 months to 56 years
William Murray — 1, age 50 years
S.M. [Spencer May] Warren — 1, age 31 years
Alfred J. Brown — 4, ages 2 to 26 years
E.G. [Edwin G.] Clark — 2, ages 11 and 13 years
Margaret H. Battle — 32, ages 1 to 68 years
Thomas C. Davis — 4, ages 4 months to 23 years
Edmund Moore — 23, age 6 months to 50 years
Lovet Peacock, in trust for one minor — 4, ages 3 to 28 years
Lovet Peacock — 2, ages 1 month and 30 years
John Hearn — 8, ages 7 to 38 years
William Hamlet — 1, age 30 years
Arthur D. Farmer — 5, ages 7 to 40 years
Sarah A. Stephens — 3, ages 12 to 66 years
Jane Hamlet — 2, ages 12 and 31 years (the younger described as “D[eaf] & D[umb]”)
Spencer Fountain — 1, age 11 years
A.C. Thomas — 1, age 14 years
Perry Barnes, in trust for one minor — 4, ages 18 to 60 years
Thomas D. Gay — 8, ages 1 to 28 years
Sallie Barnes — 2, ages 8 and 11 years
J.D. [Jonathan Dew] Rountree — 12, ages 4 months to 50 years
B[uckner D]. Stith — 1, age 38 years
Mary E. Ricks — 1, age 20 years
L.D. [Larry Dew] Farmer — 33, ages 2 months to 37 years
Elizabeth Farmer — 14, ages 9 months to 54 years
Jesse H. Adams — 31, ages 2 to 70 years
George Howard — 8, ages 6 to 39 years
Jacob S. Barnes — 20, ages 2 to 65 years
Jesse S. Barnes — 7, ages 4 months to 36 years
John Farmer — 21, ages 3 to 34 years + “left out on page,” 6 additional, ages 37 to 56 years
John Farmer, in trust for 6 heirs — 19, ages 8 to 63 years
George Barefoot — 10, ages 1 to 75 years
John S. Barnes — 1, age 7 years
Dempsey G. Barnes — 1, age 26 years
A.J. [Andrew Jackson] Barefoot — 15, ages 5 months to 60 years
Mary Barnes’ Sarah — age 100
James Tomlinson — 6, ages 3 to 30 years
John McGowns — 11, ages 2 months to 40 years
Ann Scarboro — 10, 6 months to 50 years
Benjamin Simms — 37, ages 3 months to 63 years
Larry Dew — 34, ages 3 months to 60 years
Joshua Barnes — 67, ages 8 months to 94 years
Thomas Jordan — 15, ages 9 months to 32 years
J.H. Martin — 1, age 21 years
Jacob Taylor — 6, ages 8 to 45 years
Julian Jordan — 4, ages 3 to 30 years
John Barnes — 8, ages 4 months to 27 years
William Tomlinson — 9, ages 2 to 54 years
Samuel Barnes — 3, ages 5 months to 24 years
Jonathan Bullock — 1, age 50 years
John W. Farmer — 10, ages 7 to 46 years
Ira G. Ellis — 8, ages 10 months to 32 years
Cornelius Jordan — 7, ages 2 to 50 years
John P. Clark — 5, ages 3 to 25 years
R.H. [Richard Hines] Blount — 27, ages 4 months to 80 years
R.H. Blount, in trust for 2 minor heirs — 2, ages 24 and 75 years
J.J. [Joseph J.] Lawrence — 2, ages 12 and 19 years
James Jordan — 4, ages 12 to 30 years
J.W. [James Watson] Davis — 2, both age 14 years
Martha Selby — 5, ages 3 to 45 years
Isaac Harris — 6, ages 1 to 26 years
John Dew — 27, ages 5 months to 39 years
Gray B. Sharp — 5, ages 14 to 52 years
Samuel Marshbourn — 18, ages 1 month to 65 years
Jonathan T. Dew — 7, ages 8 to 34 years
David Dew — 7, ages 6 to 50 years
John Coleman — 2, ages 27 to 30 years
Patsey White — 8, ages 1 to 47 years
Isaac B. Farmer — 20, ages 6 months to 40 years
Nancy Farmer — 2, both age 50 years
Ephraim E. Cobb — 1, age 18
Isaac Farmer — 2, ages 45 and 50 years
Ceborn Farmer — 3, ages 9 to 55 years
Iredell Farmer — 1, age 20 years
Permelia Farmer — 1, age 55 years
Jesse B. Robbins — 5, ages 8 months to 38 years
Arthur Robbins — 10, ages 1 month to 60 years
John Thorn — 5, ages 2 to 25 years
S.B. Farmer — 14, ages 1 to 67 years
G.W. Ruffin — 22, ages 3 to 43 years
James Farmer — 1, age 94 years
Arthur B. Dew — 6, ages 3 months to 51 years
Lemon Ruffin — 21, ages 1 to 52 years
David Conner — 1, age 70 years
Elizabeth Amason — 4, ages 5 to 50 years
Calvin Rountree — 2, ages 1 and 36 years
Crissie Rountree — 1, age 8 years
Elizabeth Rountree — 6, ages 10 months to 61 years
James Rountree — 1, age 32 years
Charles Rountree — 8, ages 2 to 29 years
Margaret Rountree — 12, ages 1 to 37 years
Elisha Barnes — 1, age 23 years
James D. Barnes, in trust for 4 minor heirs — 5, ages 14 to 51 years
Charles F. Deems — 1, age 40 years
Jackson Brinkley — 2, ages 8 and 17 years
[no first name] Skinner — 1, age 25 years
Nathan T. Rountree — 3, ages 2 to 30 years
John Harper — 3, ages 8 to 36 years
O[swald]. Lipscomb — 9, ages 6 to 55 years
Benjamin Bynum — 12, ages 1 to 41 years
Thomas Mollison — 3, ages 13 to 23 years
Walter Farmer — 13, ages 3 months to 55 years
A.S. [Alexander Spotswood] Cotton — 42, ages 1 to 70 years
Thomas Hadley — 39, ages 2 to 74 years
Calvin Parker — 13, ages 1 to 38 years
Jesse Fulghum — 9, ages 2 to 56 years
Alsey Stott — 2, ages 7 and 20 years
David Taylor — 5, ages 8 to 50 years
Thomas Johnston — 4, ages 11 to 56 years
Joshua Barnes, in trust for 2 minor heirs — 29, ages 2 months to 65 years
William Barnes Jr., in trust for 1 minor heir — 6, ages 9 to 38 years

Wilson Daily Times, 7 June 1943.
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In the 1900 census of Cross Roads township, Wilson County: farmer Elbert Kent, 55, widower, and children Joseph, 18, Albert, 15, Bettie, 8, Rebecca, 7, and Isaiah, 4; plus daughter Martha Barnes, 23, widow, and her children Rebecca, 4, and Joseph, 2.
In the 1910 census of Springhill township, Wilson County: farmer Elbert Kent, 64; wife Lizzie, 43; and children Bettie, 18, Rebecca, 17, and Isiah, 15.
In the 1920 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 217 Pender Street, farmer Sam Collins, 61; wife Bell, 52; daughter Early May, 8; and lodger Rebecca Kintz, 25, seamstress.
On 16 November 1921, Walter Thorp, 44, of Wilson, son of Anderson and Lucinda Thorp, married Rebecca Kent, 28, of Wilson County, daughter of Elbert and Lissie Kent, at the A.M.E. Zion church in Wilson.
In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 1111 Washington Street, carpenter Walter Thorp, 63; wife Rebecca, 46, sewing; and roomer Jane Boyd, 36, county home demonstration agent.
Walter T. Thorpe died 21 January 1941 in Mercy Hospital, Wilson. Per his death certificate, he was 47 years old; was born in Granville County, N.C., to Anderson and Lucy Thorpe; was married to Rebecca Thorpe; and lived at 1111 Washington Street.
On 4 February 1850, Michael Holt served as security for Narcissa Dawson, who had purchased a mother and child, Lucy and Anelizer, from Moye & Adams, “traders in negroes,” with a note for $475.00 payable in 12 months. Deed Book 14, page 256, Chancery Clerk’s Office, Monroe County, Mississippi.
Wyatt Moye and Robert S. Adams formed their slave-dealing partnership in Edgecombe (now Wilson) County, specializing in hauling enslaved people from North Carolina to the slave markets of Aberdeen County in western Mississippi. I don’t know where Lucy and Anna Eliza fell into their hands or what became of them.

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Image courtesy of Veterans of World War II Wilson County, spiral-bound volume, Wilson County Public Library.