J.D. Reid borrows $200.

Deed Book 66, page 565, Wilson County Register of Deeds Office, Wilson.

——

J.D. Reid borrowed $200 from Nancy Harriss in January 1904, guaranteeing the loan with a mortgage on a lot he owned on Green Street that bordered Short Barnes and Louis Battle. The loan was to be repaid in twelve months, but margin notes reveal the mortgage wasn’t cancelled until March 1912. Note that S.H. Vick acted as Reid’s agent.

Black Creek enslavers.

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 people described in the 1860 slave schedule. The paucity of such identifications is heartbreaking, and I continue to search.

We start with Black Creek district, which was part of Wayne County prior to 1855. The 1860 slave schedule lists 59 enslavers in this section of Wilson County. The largest, by order of magnitude, was Stephen Woodard Sr.:

Sallie Simms — 10, age 7 months to 72 years

William Thompson — 22, age 0.5 to 44 years

Dr. A.G. Brooks —  29, age 1 to 55 years

Enos Barnes — 2, age 15 and 18 years

Celia Barnes — 2, age 28 and 53 years

James Barnes — 9, age 3 to 50 years

Jesse Watson — 1, age 10 years

Jacob Daniel — 4, age 9 to 60 years

Joseph Farrell — 9, age 5 months to 38 years

James Nusom — 22, age 1 to 28 years

Jesse Sauls — 7, age 3 to  26 years

Nancy Bass —  8, age 5 months to 36 years

Belinda Aycock — 6, age 3 to 38 years

  • Hannah, Arthur and Matilda

Sallie Daniel — 14, age 11 months to 53 years

Elisha Bass — 6, age 3 months to 30 years

Jeremiah Bass — 3, age 4 months to 17 years

Ephraim Bass — 1, age 36 years

Jinnet Holland — 4, age 4 months to 23 years

Jonathan Barnes — 19, age 3 months to 65 years

Henry King — 11, age 3 months to 27 years

Edith Horn — 13, age 2 to 55 years

  • Elijah, Linnet, Patience and child Hilard, Will, Litha, Jeffrey, Sarah

Milly Barnes — 21, age 4 to 78 years

Larry Nusom — 21, age 1 to 39 years

Stephen Woodard Jr. — 16, age 6 months to 30 years

Stephen Woodard Sr. — 65, age 1 to 39 years

Amos Horn in trust — 9, age 2 months to 37 years

Henry Pope and two others — 3, age 1 to 36 years

R.M. Cox — 15, age 9 months to 33 years

Arthur Bass — 7, age 8 months to 35 years

James H. Barnes — 8, age 8 months to  32 years

Joseph S. Holt — 3, age 5 to 40 years

Jesse Bass — 7, age 1 to 35 years

  • Bob and Rhoda

Abigail Simms — 8, age 1 to 60 years

  • Harriet, Frank and Ellen

P.H. Simms — 3, age 1 to 35 years

  • Harriet, Frank and Ellen

Mary A. Simms — 3, age 3 to 33 years

Thomas Amason — 2, age 13 and 17 years

B.F. Briggs — 3, age 6 to 12 years

Ichabod Pearson — 7, age 1 to 35 years

John P. Bardin — 7, age 6 to 50 years

Arthur Bardin — 2, age 19 and 20 years

Zilpha Daniel — 14, age 2 months to 39 years

W.R. Bass — 2, age 11 and 35 years

W.R. Bass in trust — 7, age  6 to 73 years

Benjamin Barnes — 3, age 6 to 9 years

Annis Bass — 1, age 68 years

Ezekiel Smith — 14, age 1 to 33 years

Stephen Privett — 4, age 1 to 20 years

Jonah Barnes — 10, age 2 to 38 years

Calvin Barnes — 1, age 36 years

Ruffin Barnes  — 4, age 6 to 65 years

Elias Barnes — 2, age 7 months to 17 years

Jacob Woodard — 5, age 17 to 65 years

Felix Woodard — 2, age 6 months to 17 years

Joel Rose — 1, age 11 years

McKinley Durden — 6, age 9 to 35 years

Amos Horn — 2, age 12 to 35 years

Robinson H. Baker — 11, age 4 months to 34 years

Granberry Ethridge — 1, age  14  years

W.W. Williamson — 3, age 18 to 50 years

 

Thank you, Councilmember Kellum.

A couple of months ago, I went a little off-topic to ask Wilson’s new council members to set new standards for communication with their constituents (and others with vested interests in community affairs). I don’t know if Susan Kellum saw my post, but, one way or another, she heard my cry. Kellum has demonstrated a refreshing and unprecedented willingness to listen to community concerns and made herself available for last week’s meeting even though she had a tight schedule. 

Here’s what I wrote in January: “… a timely post from a council member, especially about issues directly concerning the people who put them in office, is both efficient and effective and allows for comments and quick feedback from community members. No one is expecting council to spill state secrets on Facebook, but the dense fog that shrouds Wilson’s workings needs to dissipate, and these kinds of posts are absolute sunshine.” Thank you, Susan Kellum, for championing hard conversations and for keeping the community informed.

The last will and testament of James S. Aycock (1836).

James S. Aycock’s farm lay on “the south side of the new Road leading to Stantonsburg” from Black Creek in what was then Wayne County. On 3 November 1836, he executed a last will and testament that provided, among other things:

  • wife Belinda Aycock was to receive “one Negro Woman by the name of Hannah” outright
  • wife Belinda Aycock was also to receive “one Negro Man by the name of Arthur” and “one Negro Woman by the name of Matilda” until daughter Kezia Aycock turned 21 years of age

  • all three were to be sold upon Belinda Aycock’s death or remarriage and the proceeds distributed to James S. Aycock’s children

 

I would love to ask you a few questions ….

A couple of weeks ago, I received an unexpected email from a student at an area high school.

I wrote back and suggested that she send the questions and that we set up a Zoom meeting to chat.

We were finally able to meet yesterday. There are levels to my motivation for curating Black Wide-Awake, but highlighting and preserving history for the benefit of young people is close to the surface. I was honored by E.C.’s interest in the why of my work and deeply impressed by her preparation and thoughtful communication.

Thank you, E., for the opportunity to talk about the importance of researching local history and genealogy. I wish you the best as you complete your high school studies and go on to make your mark in the world!

Funeral announcement for Louis Hagans.

Wilson Daily Times, 2 March 1937.

In the 1900 census of Taylor township, Wilson County: farmer Charles Haggans, 39; wife Charity, 39; and children Martha, 18, Louis, 16, Joney, 14, Isaac, 13, Lou R., 10, and Charles, 1.

On 22 December 1909, Louis Hagans, 24, son of Charlie and Charity Hagans, married Hattie Smith, 17, daughter of Thomas and Edie Smith, in Wilson. Baptist minister Fred M. Davis performed the ceremony.

In the 1910 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: Louis Haggans, 26, servant, and wife Hattie, 17.

In 1918, John Louis Hagans registered for the World War I draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 4 April 1884; lived on Queen Street; and worked as a farm laborer for J.G. Roney.

The last will and testament of Pitts Kirby (1864).

On 3 November 1864, Pitts Kirby of Wilson County executed a detailed will disposing of his worldly goods. Kirby lived on the far southwest edge of the county, within a mile or two of the Johnston County line.

In addition, Kirby directed that his “Negro Boy Isaac” be hired out until his youngest child reached age eighteen “& then to be Sold & Equally Divided among all of my Children.”

Pitts Kirby didn’t die for more than a decade and, in any event, Ellick and Isaac were emancipated six months after this will was drafted.

——

The 1860 slave schedule of Kirbys district, Wilson County, lists Pitts Kirby with two enslaved young men, a 19 year-old and a 17 year-old — Ellick and Isaac. (Or Isaac and Ellick.)

On 6 May 1866, Alexander Kirby and Martha Perry registered their cohabitation with the Johnston County clerk, thereby legitimating their marriage, which had taken place in June 1861.

On 2 May 1867, Isaac Kirby and Mary Barnes were married in Johnston County, North Carolina.

In the 1870 census of Beulah township, Johnston County, N.C.: farmer Isaac Kirby, 30, and wife Mary, 18, farm laborer. He claimed $50/real estate and $125/personal estate.

In the 1870 census of Beulah township, Johnston County, N.C.: Alexander Kirby, 30, farm laborer; wife Martha, 30; and five children Allen, 8, Willis, 6, Neely, 3, James, 2, and Mary, 3 months. [The eldest two children were born in slavery on the farm on which their mother was enslaved.]

In the 1880 census of Springhill township, Wilson County: farmer Isaac Kirby, 41; wife Mary, 25; and sons Willis, 14, and Leroy, 1.

In the 1880 census of Beulah township, Johnston County: farmer Alic Kirby, 43; wife Martha J., 40; and children Clarkey, 21, Willis, 17, Milley J., 14, James A., 12, Mary, 10, Martha A., 8, Martha A., 7, Sarah E., 6, Evaline, 3, Lewis Z., 2, and Leroy, 10 months.

In the 1900 census of Springhill township, Wilson County: farmer Isaac S. Kirby, 58; wife Mary, 54; and sons Leroy A., 21, William, 14, and Isaac R., 13.

In the 1900 census of Springhill township, Wilson County: day laborer Alex Kirby, 61; wife Martha J., 60; sons Amos, 18, and Obie, 12; and grandson Wiley, 5.

It appears that both Isaac S. Kirby and Alexander Kirby died between 1900 and 1910. Were they brothers?