Month: February 2025

Lane Street Project: season 5, workday 4.

I don’t often get to put in a full Lane Street Project service day, but yesterday I put in work. Castonoble Hooks and Briggs Sherwood were in the parking lot oiling tools when I pulled up, and Raymond Renfrow was headed into the trees to hack down wisteria shoots.

Our complete elimination of treetop wisteria and dead trees has exposed the ground to sunlight for the first time in decades. Enormous weeds and weedy shrubs — dog fennel, pokeweed, privet, sedge grass, and wisteria shoots — have rushed to colonize the space. With the arrival of Portia Newman and Lisa Benoy Gamble, we focused on cutting and clearing the areas between Henry Tart and Lula Dew Wooten‘s headstones. When Billy Woodard strode in John Henry-style with ax and chainsaw, we sent him deeper into the cemetery to fell small dead or dying trees and cut large vines. Chris Facey circled among us, chronicling the work through his cameras, and a large pile of cuttings waits to be hauled to the curb by the next workday’s volunteers.

B. Sherwood takes a breather after clearing around Lula Dew’s fine grave marker. You can see behind him how thickly the weed stalks have sprouted. 

Portia and I went hunting for the pile of headstones that includes my great-great-grandmother Rachel Taylor‘s and found these weird swells of dried weeds. I generally know my noisome invasive plants, but this one is throwing me. This area was cleared last season, so this growth occurred over the summer and fall.

What is this stuff?

It reshrouded the headstones and everything else at the back of the opening. I had to pull up mats of this stuff to get to Rachel Taylor’s headstone, which was once again pinned down by wisteria runners. On the plus side, it pulls free fairly easily, and the task will be even less difficult without snow weighing down and wetting the stalks.

Bessie McGowan’s headstone released from its shroud.

On the bright side, late February and early March are daffodil season at Odd Fellows and Rountree Cemeteries!

Photos by Lisa Y. Henderson, February 2025.

The sixth anniversary of the Wilson Graded School.

This amazing document is the program for the sixth commencement exercises of the Wilson Colored Graded School, which took place May 21-23, 1889. The ceremonies took place in Odd Fellows Hall — the apparent predecessor to the three-story brick Odd Fellows Building Samuel H. Vick built in 1894. (Was it on East Nash Street, too?)

Teachers Susie Harrison and Lucy Robinson led exercises for the first, second, and third grade students; Braswell R. Winstead for the fourth and fifth graders; and Principal S.H. Vick, the sixth and seventh graders. J.P. Murphey, W.H. Vick, J.E. Hocutt, R.D. Dew, and J.H. Edwards served as ushers. 

The main feature was the sixth and grade exercises. On May 23, Presbyterian minister H.H. Boone of Tarboro delivered the Annual Oration between performances of “Come Again With Singing” and “Soldier’s Chorus.” Sixth grade students Ella Johnson, J.E. Hocutt, Sarah Barnes, Turner Williamson, Howard Edwards, Sarah L. Rountree, Amanda Battle, Ida Rountree, and Augustus S. Clark declaimed, sang, or orated, as did seventh graders J.P. Murphrey, Celia Hill, Adelia Battle, Sarah T. Rountree, Charlotte Jordan, W.H. Vick, Annie M. Washington, and W.H. Clark.

Studio shots, no. 257: William I. Hagans.

Flame and Steel (1948), yearbook of Murrell Dobbins Vocational-Technical High School, Philadelphia.

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In the 1930 census of Toisnot township, Wilson County, North Carolina: auto shop mechanic Joe Hagans, 29; wife Estelle, 28; sons Joseph, 2, and William I., 1; and father-in-law Van Dawson, 55, farmer, widower.

In the 1940 census of Philadelphia, Philadelphia County, Pennsylvania: Brown Street garage mechanic Joseph Haggan, 39, widower; sons Joseph Jr., 12, and William, 11; and lodgers Sylvestia Edwards, 29; wife Carrie, 21; and Henry Counts, 46, auto mechanic.

In 1946, William Hagans registered for the World War II draft in Philadelphia. Per his registration cards, he was born 26 August 1928 in Elm City, North Carolina; lived at 4650 Brown Street, Philadelphia; his contact was father Joseph Hagans; and was a student.

Rolesville reckons with lynching.

The Wake Weekly, 12 September 2024.

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Kudos to Rolesville! This is what community looks like.  Descendants, teachers, and students — the Wake County Community Remembrance Coalition; the Historic Rolesville Society; and the mayor and town board collaborated with Alabama’s Equal Justice Initiative to commemorate the only documented lynching in Wake County, that of George Taylor in 1918.

Taylor was arrested — abducted, actually — in Wilson County and taken to Rolesville in the trunk of car. I blogged about his terrible death here.

Equal Justice Initiative partners with communities to install narrative historical markers at the sites of racial terror lynchings.

Historical markers are a compelling tool in the creation of a permanent record of racial terror violence that provides everyone in the community exposure to our shared history of racial injustice. EJI’s historical markers detail the narrative events surrounding a specific lynching victim, or group of racial terror lynching victims, and the history of racial terrorism in America.

“Through the Historical Marker Project, local communities are motivated to confront historical trauma that is both universal and also very specific to the Black experience. EJI’s Historical Marker Projects are led by community coalitions that include individuals representing a diversity of experiences and affiliations in the local community. EJI believes that reckoning with the truth of racial violence that has shaped our communities is essential for healing.”

Two of these markers are waiting for Wilson County.

Studio shots, no. 256: Lawrence Hagans.

Lawrence Hagans (1916-1965).

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In the 1920 census of Gardners township, Wilson County: James Haggans, 45, farmer; wife Annie, 40; children James, 17, Mallie, 15, Etta, 11, Joe and Jonah, 9, Nelia, 7, Haggar, 6, and Lawrence, 4; and cousin Will Coley, 25, laborer.

In the 1930 census of Wilson, Wilson township: James Hagan, 53; wife Nora, 50; children John and Joe, 18, Lawrence, 16, and Etta, 21; grandchildren Elizabeth, 15, Eliza, 13, Susa M., 10, Leeoma, 8, David, 5, Bessie M., 3, Lillie M., 1, and Charlie Reid, 4; and daughter Ida Reid, 32.

In the 1940 census of Jersey City, Hudson County, New Jersey: at 25-A Jewett Avenue, postal clerk Edward Williams, 42, and wife Ella, 43, domestic, both of Texas; children Ella, 12, Albert, 10, Herbert, 6, and Dorothy, 5, all born in N.J.; son-in-law Lawrence Hagan, 24, porter at U.S. Testing Company, born in N.C.; daughter Amy Hagan, 20, born in New York; granddaughter Barbara Hagan, 4 months, born in N.J.; son-in-law Harold Harris, 18, steel mill riveter, born in N.J.; daughter Bernice, 16, born in N.J.; granddaughter Janice, 3 months, born in N.J.; and mother Elenora Days, 60, born in Texas.

In 1940, Lawrence Hagan registered for the World War II draft in Hudson County, New Jersey. Per his registration card, he was born 27 March 1916 in Wilson, N.C.; lived at 25-A Jewett Avenue, Jersey City, N.J.; his contact was wife Amy Hagan; and he worked for U.S. Testing Company, Hoboken, N.J.

In the 1950 census of Jersey City, Hudson County, New Jersey: Lawrence Hagans, 35, testing company porter; wife Amy, 30; and children Barbara, 10, Patricia, 9, and Lawrence Jr., 7.

Lawrence Hagans died in 21 September 1965 in New Jersey.

Photo courtesy of Ancestry.com Carla Tyler.

The final report of the estate of Charlie Brantley.

Mollie Brantley Howard served as administratrix of her brother Charlie Brantley‘s estate. In her final report, she noted that she had received $2500 from promissory notes and disbursed that amount for funeral expenses; for estate-related fees; for her own 5% commission; and the remainder to herself as sole heir.

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In the 1880 census of Taylors township, Wilson County: Henderson Howard, 40; wife Mollie, 25; and children Charley, 8, Richard, 6, Bettie, 5, and Hellan, 1. [Henderson Brantley and family often used the surname Howard.]

In the 1900 census of Taylors township, Wilson County: widow Henderson Howard, 59, farmer; children Charley, 26, and Bettie, 21; and servant Linda Boon, 44.

In the 1910 census of Taylor township, Wilson County: Charlie Brantley, 35, sawmill laborer; son Fenner Locust, 17, farm laborer “working out”; and daughter Mena Locust, 13, farm laborer “working out.”

In the 1920 census of Taylor township, Wilson County: farmer Charlie Brantley, 48; Fenner Brantley, 26, servant; and lodger Wily Howard, 21, “cropper.”

Phener Brantley died 6 January 1924 in Taylor township, Wilson County. Per his death certificate, he was 31 years old; was born in Wilson County to Charlie Brantley and Margaret Lucas; was single; worked as a laborer; and was buried in the family cemetery. She was described as white.

In the 1940 census of Taylor township, Wilson County: Charlie Brankley, 63; his sister Mollie Howard, 53; and lodger Earnest Howard, 30, a farm laborer.

Charlie Brantley died 8 January 1948 in Taylor township, Wilson County. Per his death certificate, he was single; was born 1 August 1874 in Nash County to Hence Brantley and Mollie Boone; was a farmer; and was buried in Brantley cemetery. Mollie Brantley was informant.

Wilson County, North Carolina, Settlement Records 1942-1955, http://www.familysearch.org.