Month: November 2025

Adam Scott, Barbecue Artist, in Wilson.

If you love the people and culture and history of eastern North Carolina, and you’re not reading David Cecelski‘s beautiful and richly textured essays about the Coastal Plain past, fix that. His most recent blogpost is a deep dive into the life of Barbecue King Adam Scott of Goldsboro, a small city about 25 miles south of Wilson, and draws upon photographs found in the N.C. Department of Conservation and Development Collection at the North Carolina State Archives in Raleigh.

Among the images Cecelski selected is this one of Scott at a barbecue in Wilson in 1948.

A little hunting in the Wilson Daily Times and I found a 16 October 1948 piece about the convention of the North Carolina State Grange to be held in Wilson October 26-28. Ava Gardner, “Wilson’s contribution to Hollywood,” had been invited to attend a fashion show and guests were to be treated to “a special barbecue with Adam Scott, of Goldsboro, doing the cooking.”

Eastern North Carolina pitmasters like Wilson’s Ed Mitchell have expanded the legacy of Adam Scott, who cooked for governors and senators and presidents, as well as the every day folk who stepped through his back door on Brazil Street. Though Scott’s Famous Barbecue Restaurant is long-closed, you can order Scott’s vinegar and red pepper-based, sugar- and fat-free barbecue sauce right now.

Rest in peace, Arlean Lindsey Snead.

“Ms. Arlean Lindsey Sneed, 99, of Hampton, VA surrounded by family, departed her earthy life on Tuesday, November 25, 2025.  She was one of nine children, born on March 10, 1926, in Wilson County, to Phil and Lugenia Lindsey who predeceased her. She was a faithful follower of Jesus Christ who constantly sought God through prayer. She is survived by her children: Henry (Carol) of Hampton, VA, James (Linda) of Jackson, MS, Marvin of Elm City, NC, Veretta S. White (predeceased), ten grandchildren, a host of great grandchildren, family, and friends. In addition to her deceased parents, she was preceded in death by two brothers and five sisters.

“Her Celebration of Life is scheduled for Saturday, November 29, 2025, at 12:00 pm at Calvary Presbyterian Church, 209 Pender St., E., Wilson, NC.  Reverend Henry Sneed will deliver the eulogy.  Interment will follow in Williams Chapel Cemetery, Williams Chapel Church Road, Elm City NC.”

Funeral Program Friday.

Somebody said: “She got one for Doug in her purse.”

Somebody else said: “All the plot twists. We read it from cover to cover. Tryna add and subtract dates and ages. Also, trying to figure out who are all the extra names listed and who was left off.”

If I shared five a week, it would take me more than three years to highlight every funeral program (or as some of us like to call them, “obituary”) in my growing collection. The earliest date to the 1950s — simple, typed mimeographs that bear little resemblance to today’s full-color, multi-page, photograph-filled productions. Funeral programs are crucial resources for African-American genealogy and community history — save me one!

Image courtesy of Instagram user 25_bwb

Redux: Buckhorn Reservoir and the graves of Julia Bailey and Andrew Terrell.

Some view my insistence on independent investigations into what happened to Vick Cemetery’s headstones; the location of graves in the public right-of-way bordering Vick Cemetery; and how power poles came to be installed in Vick Cemetery as retributive.

They are wrong.

There can be no justice for the dead (or living) harmed by the City of Wilson’s decades of action and inaction at Vick Cemetery. We will never know all the names of the 4224+ dead. We will never recover their grave markers. We will never whose graves — or how many — were cracked open or crushed in the widening of Lane Street or the placement of 90-foot power poles and their attendant guy wires.

What we can determine, however, is HOW THESE OUTRAGES WERE ALLOWED TO HAPPEN and, consequently, what systems, policies, and procedures can be put into place to prevent anything like them from happening again.

Last week, I received a set of photographs that reminded me that Vick Cemetery is not unique in Wilson County and that shortcuts and conveniences (or inconveniences) and indifference and neglect have left their shameful mark elsewhere.

I’ve written of Buckhorn Reservoir and the headstones of Julia Boyette Bailey and Andrew W. Terrell before. In a nutshell, Wilson County Register of Deeds Office’s “Grave Removals” volume, which contains records of every registered disinterment and/or reinterment in the county for the past 50 or so years, contains no record of the removal of the graves of Julia Bailey, Andrew Terrell, or the 16-18 unknown others whose disinterment was publicized in 1998 ahead of the expansion of Buckhorn Reservoir.

As the headstones of Bailey and Terrell attest, the graves now lie at the edge or under the lake. There’s no record because the graves were never removed.

Al Letchworth took this photo of Terrell’s broken gravestone in 2019. It has since disappeared.

Here is Terrell’s foot marker, as photographed by Randy Marshburn last week.

And here are the grave markers of Julia Boyette Bailey, a woman who was born into slavery; grew to adulthood, married, and bore children under its yoke; and lived only four years beyond it. Hers is one of the, if not the, oldest known burials of an African-American person in Wilson County.

Buckhorn Reservoir is the primary water source for the City of Wilson. The City of Wilson is the owner of the reservoir and the dam that created it. Wilson Utilities is responsible for the reservoir’s management.

In 1998, during roughly the same period that the City of Wilson was throwing away headstones and drilling holes in Vick Cemetery to install power poles, it was on the other side of the county flooding black cemeteries to expand its reservoir. 

What failures of process allowed this to happen? How do we prevent further failure? Is the City of Wilson prepared to be transparent about — and accountable for — its errors and misdeeds, or will it continue to whistle past the (figurative and literal) graveyard?

My profound gratitude to Randy Marshburn and Al Letchworth for these photographs and their deep concern for the graves of Julia Bailey and Andrew Terrell.

Eden and Mount Lawn cemeteries, Philadelphia.

I don’t know that it’s possible to know exactly how many made the journey, but Philadelphia was a landing spot for hundreds of African-Americans who migrated from Wilson County, including my grandmother. On a quick recent trip to the area, I sought out Historic Eden Cemetery, listed as final resting place on several Pennsylvania death certificates for Wilson County natives. To my surprise, my route took me right past Mount Lawn Cemetery, which also holds burials of Wilson County migrants.

We honor our kinfolk, their lives, their struggles and triumphs. Rest in peace.

 

 

Photos by Lisa Y. Henderson, November 2025.

Giving thanks.

I am grateful for so much this year and am mindful to deliver my appreciation in real time. An extra special thanks is warranted, however, for  20 women and men, aged 83 to 100, who shared with me their time and memories of their Wilson County childhoods. I spoke with seven of my father’s Darden High School classmates; with attendees of at least seven different Rosenwald schools; with folks who stayed in Wilson their entire lives and others who joined the Great Migration out. I recorded their stories and returned transcripts for them to linger over and share with their families. I jotted notes on fascinating tidbits to research further, some of which have already made it into Black Wide-Awake.

I still have a long list of people I’d love to interview, and hope you’ll refer any elders who might want to talk. As importantly, I encourage you to capture your family’s history. Holiday gatherings are the perfect time to pull out your phone and start recording, whether video or audio. Ask. And listen.