Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 24 March 1917.
I have not been able to identify the person whose body Camillus L. Darden transported back to Wilson — by train? by automobile? — in March 1917.
Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 21 April 1917.
Can you imagine? Each spring, hundreds and hundreds of county school children gathered at the Colored Graded School to launch a parade through the streets of downtown Wilson, led by a brass marching band. (The article says 2000 children marched in 1917. There were only about 20 county schools, none larger than three rooms. That is a thirst for knowledge.) The children’s manual arts exhibits were displayed on the school grounds and in the auditorium an array of dignitaries (including “three white ladies from New York” and Dr. Frank S. Hargrave) graced the stage. Speaker after speaker delivered messages in the Booker T. Washington mode — work hard, be patriotic, know your place. J.D. Reid, principal of the Graded School and supervisor of the black county schools, was recognized for having spearheaded a prodigious fundraising drive, money that likely represented the community’s monetary contribution to the four Rosenwald Schools built in Wilson County in 1917 and ’18 — Williamson, Rocky Branch, Kirby’s, and Lucama. (Just shy of a year later, Reid and Charles L. Coon were embroiled in the disgraceful events that led to a boycott of the Graded School, but let’s stay present….)
——

In the 1920 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: on Saratoga Road, Henry Whitehead, 48; wife Victoria, 32; and children Willie, 27, Della Mae, 13, Catherine, 9, Odell, 7, James, 5, Grace, 2, and Rosalie, 1.
In the 1930 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: on Highway 91, owned and valued at $2500, oil mill contractor Henry Whitehead, 53; wife Victoria, 43, seamstress; and children Katherine, 19, Odell, 17, James, 15, Grace, 13, Rosalyn, 11, Herbert, 9, Gertrude, 6, Mable, 4, and Victoria, 2.
In the 1940 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: widow Victoria Whitehead, 52, sewing; children James, 25, apprentice carpenter; Rosaline, 21; Herbert, 20, tobacco company floor hand; Gertrude, 16, Mabel, 14, and Victoria E., 12; and nieces Elizabeth Brodie, 32, public school teacher, and [actually, granddaughter] Joan Bynum, 6.
James Henry Whitehead registered for the World War II draft in 1940.
Image courtesy of Veterans of World War II Wilson County, spiral-bound volume, Wilson County Public Library.
Wilson Daily Times, 15 July 1949.
Though their longtime leader Ben Mincey was nearing death, the Wilson colored volunteer company, better known as the Red Hots, won top honors at the North Carolina colored fire association’s annual contest, securing silver belt.
The company:
The hose reel team:
The spectators:

When Elisha Felton made out his will in 1854, he made no mention of enslaved people. Rather, after making several cash bequests, he directed that the remainder of his property be sold. Felton, who lived in the White Oak area, died in 1858, his son William Felton and James Barnes handled his estate of Elisha Felton. Estate records reveal that Felton and Barnes sold three women at two sales in the liquidation of the elder Felton’s estate..
At a sale held 22 October 1858, Felton and Barnes sold Piney and Louezer to Rubin Felton and Patrick Byrum.
At a sale held 19 March 1859, Esther, who was either very elderly or disabled, was sold for $68.75 to Byrum.
Elisha Felton Estate File, Wilson County, N.C., U.S. Wills and Probate Records 1665-1998, http://www.ancestry.com.

Wilson Daily Times, 15 April 1944.