Births Deaths Marriages

The obituary of Esther Drake Bynum.

Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 27 February 1943.

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In the 1930 census of Cross Roads township, Wilson County: farmer Ernest Drake, 43; wife Rosetta, 37; and children Lawrence, 18, Floyd, 17, James, 15, Lottie B., 12, Esther M., 8, Annie L., 6, and David, 3.

In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 604 Daniel Street, W.P.A. laborer Ernest Drake, 53, widower; children Lottie B., 22, Elsie May, 20, David, 13, Herman, 7; and grandchildren Emma Gray, 5, May Lee, 3, Jimmy Lee, 2, and Jimmie Dee, 2 months.

Esther Drake Bynum 17 February 1943 in Princess Anne County, Virginia. Per her death certificate, she was born 13 January 1921 in Wilson, N.C., to Ernest Drake and Rosetta Harris, both born in Richmond County, Virginia; and was buried in Calvary Cemetery, Norfolk, Va.

Lane Street Project: 2 September 2025 letter to city officials.

The letter I wrote to the Mayor, City Manager, and City Council Members in the wake of last week’s “false” alarm (as to bones, not erosion) at Vick Cemetery:

I first raised question about Vick more than five years ago. While some progress has been made with its general maintenance, for two years the City has completely ignored the myriad issues that remain. I urge everyone who cares about Vick Cemetery to contact city leaders directly to express their concerns. Carping on Facebook feels good, but doesn’t reach the right eyes or ears.

If you are new to this issue, please reach out to me at blackwideawake@gmail.com, and I’d be happy to answer any questions you have. Thank you.

The obituary of Cora P. Artice of Portsmouth, Virginia.

Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 27 January 1934.

Portsmouth Star, 25 July 1936.

Portsmouth Star, 29 July 1936.

Portsmouth Star, 1 August 1936.

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In the 1880 census of Nahunta township, Wayne County, N.C.: farmer Jesse Artis, 35; wife Lucinda, 30; and children Cora, 7, Hattie, 5, Allice, 4, and Appie, 1.

On 15 November 1893, Elroy Artis and Cora P. Artis were married in Wayne County.

In the 1900 census of Nahunta township, Wayne County, N.C.: farmer Elroy Artice, 27; wife Cora, 27; and Lee W., 3.

In the 1910 census of Western Branch township, Norfolk County, Virginia: odd jobs laborer  Elroy E. Artice, 36; wife Cora, 37; and children Atwood, 13, and Albrey, 9.

In the 1920 census of Portsmouth, Norfolk County, Virginia: on Mount Vernon Avenue, Navy Yard boilermaker helper Elroy Artice, 46; wife Cora, 45; sons Atwood, 22, railroad shop machinist’s helper, and Albre, 17; and brother-in-law Freddie Artice, 28, railroad freight handler.

In the 1930 census of Portsmouth, Norfolk County, Virginia: at 1400 Mount Vernon Avenue, shipfitter shop helper Leroy Artice, 56, and wife Cora P., 55.

Cora Pearl Artice died 23 July 1936 at her home at 1400 Mount Vernon Avenue, Portsmouth, Virginia. Per her death certificate, she was born 11 September 1877 in Wilson, N.C., to Jesse Artice and Lucinda Hobbs; was married to Elroy Artice; and was buried in Lincoln Cemetery.

Elroy Artice died 1 November 1940 in Elizabeth City, Pasquotank County, N.C. Per his death certificate, he was born in 1874 in Wayne County to Jessie Artice and Polly Smith; was the widower of Cora Artice; worked as a W.P.A. laborer; and was buried in Lincoln Cemetery, Portsmouth, Virginia. A.R. Artice was informant.

Portsmouth Star, 4 November 1940.

The funeral of Ida Ross Clark.

Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 24 January 1942.

This remarkable photograph captures Ida Ross Clark‘s coffin as it was wheeled from old Saint Mark’s Episcopal Church in January 1942. She was buried in the Masonic Cemetery.

Though the Wilson Daily Times ran a brief obituary, only Black newspapers like the Journal and Guide could be relied upon to run respectful images for events the community deemed important.

Lane Street Project: Community cooperation – we love it!

Yesterday, the community came together for the first of two scheduled clean-ups at Hamilton Burial Garden. I was surprised and touched to learn that Donta Chestnut also took some time to bring lawn maintenance professional Quell to Odd Fellows. Speaking live on Facebook, Chestnut showed Quell and others around while relaying the story of Samuel H. Vick, the histories of both Odd Fellows and Vick Cemeteries, and Lane Street Project.

So much work to do here and at Hamilton, and it’s going to take the whole village’s commitment.  This, y’all, is how we honor our past and our present! Thank you!

The Johnson-Moore wedding.

The Afro-American (Baltimore, Md.), 1 February 1936.

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Robert Huff Johnson married Muriel Jeanette Moore during the brief time her father I. Albert Moore was pastor at Wilson’s Saint John A.M.E. Zion Church. Johnson’s father, Rev. Robert J. Johnson eventually was appointed rector at Saint Mark’s Episcopal Church in Wilson. The marriage imploded in less than a year.

The obituary of Clarence Drake of Newport News, Virginia.

Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 22 June 1957.

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In the 1900 census of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Broad Street, farmer Thomas Drake, 55; wife Virginia [Venus], 46; and children Mattie, 20, cook, Ernest, 15, and Clarence, 11.

On 4 October 1914, Clarence Drake, 28, of Elm City, N.C., son of Thos. and Venus Drake, married Ethel Kathleen Watkins, 26, of Portsmouth, Va., daughter of Wm. and Nancy Watkins, in Richmond, Virginia.

In 1918, Clarence Drake registered for the World War I in Portsmouth, Virginia. Per his registration card, he was born 13 February 1886; lived at 821 Glasgow Street, Portsmouth, Va.; worked as a barber for W.F. Hill, 317 Main, Norfolk, Va.; and his contact was wife Ethel.

On 30 March 1926, Clarence F. Drake, 36, married Hattie Z. Langley, 23, in Wilson. Presbyterian minister Arthur H. George performed the ceremony in the presence of J.J. Langley, M. Porter, and Henry Pots.

In the 1930 census of Newport News, Virginia: barber Clarence F. Drake, 36; wife Hallie [sic] Z., 24; sister-in-law Iris Langley, 11; and nephew Estee Porter, 16.

Hattie Drake died 31 July 1937 in Newport News, Virginia. Per his death certificate, she was 30 years old; was born in Wilson, N.C., to J.L. Jarrette [sic; Langley] of Pitt County, N.C., and Lelia Savage of Edgecombe County, N.C.; was married to Clarence Drake; and was buried in Wilson.

In 1942, Clarence Franklin Drake registered for the World War II draft in Newport News, Virginia. Per his registration card, he was born 14 February 1889 in Elm City, N.C.; lived at 2309 Marshall Avenue, Newport News; his contact was Gladys Drake; and he worked for A.C. Boone at the Warwick Hotel.

White man killed by a mob.

The Miners Journal (Pottsville, Pa.), 15 May 1903.

This brief account of the murder of T. Percy Jones snatched at my eye. A man killed by a mob in Wilson in 1903? The backstory is complicated … and surprising.

Jones was a white insurance salesman from Little Rock, Arkansas, who had been boarding at the Fryar Building downtown for several weeks. A crowd of at least eleven white men broke into Jones’ room to confront him about (1) black women occupying his room and (2) suspicions that he was a detective investigating Wilson’s flourishing gambling dens. Allegedly two weeks earlier, the police had gone to Jones’ room looking for Fannie Adams, a black woman from Goldsboro wanted for stealing a watch. Adams was not there, but a letter addressed to her was found, as was a different black woman. Jones allegedly also had been spotted in a “Negro eating house” with a black woman. A posse sent a message to Jones to get out of town. Anticipating conflict, Jones kept a loaded shotgun at the head of his bed. When the mob broke down Jones’ door, guns blazing, Jones fired back. His shot lodged in the ceiling, Jones was struck in the abdomen. (Two of the mob caught friendly fire as well.) The men scattered, jumping out of windows and shimmying down ladders.

The police rounded up fish dealer J.B. Piver, merchant tailor Samuel J. Walls; brickyard laborer, prison guard and whiskey still operator John Pittman; Times pressman George Whitley, who also drove a hose wagon for Wilson Fire Company; W.P. Croom; carpenter William W. Barnes; Lawrence Morgan, who ran a gambling house; William H. Rich, a cotton mill superintendent from Alabama; farmer J. Thomas Bass of Wayne County, N.C.; barkeep Gil D. Ward, originally of Wayne County; and barkeep and Pitt County native John R. Allen, the man who was shot. At the coroner’s inquest, Mayor Doane Herring, who was among the first on the scene, gave testimony unfavorable to the arrested men, and feeling in town ran against them. Additional testimony hinted that police officers W.P. Snakenburg (a 21-year veteran and former police chief), Frank Felton, and George Mumford had been encouraged to make themselves scarce the night of the attack, and A.C.L. Railroad night watchman Peter Nichols had failed to stir when he saw the crowd moving. (Snakenburg was soon fired; Felton drew a ten-day suspension; and Nichols was stripped of police power.)

At trial, Barnes turned state’s evidence, and others each swore their innocence, claiming they had never conspired with their codefendants, were not on the scene, and in general knew nothing about the incident. A single black witness, George Moye, testified:

The Farmer and Mechanic (Raleigh, N.C.), 19 May 1903. This paper carried a blow-by-blow of both the coroner’s inquest and the trial.

In his summation, defense attorney Frederick A. Woodard thundered: “… when this crime came to my knowledge there also came to my mind the fact that a man was living here in sight of a church steeple in adultery with a negro woman. … And had he gotten what his acts deserved he would have been driven out and this horrible killing would have been averted.” Prosecutor F.S. Spruill, who had been brought in from Louisburg, N.C., shot back, “They not only killed the body but this defense has attempted to raise over this body the black name of infamy. Let those who are not guilty throw the first stone. Rich, in [Cora Duty‘s] bawdy house; Morgan in the home of a harlot when arrested and Ward, the slayer of his [black] mistress [in Wayne County.] Can these man point at a man who, it is claimed, has committed adultery?”

The first trial ended in mistrial, but in February 1904, Whitley, Ward, Rich, Pittman, Allen, and Bass were found guilty of the reduced charge of manslaughter and given sentences of six to ten months’ hard labor at the state penitentiary. Piver and Walls were tried separate from the others and were acquitted.

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In the 1900 census of Wilson, Wilson County: kinship laborer George Moye, 52, widow, and boarders Annie Graves, 40, widow, and Cora Williamson, 23, both day laborers.

The wedding of Alice W. Jones.

Journey and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 14 November 1942.

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The Eagle, the yearbook of North Carolina College for Negroes (1939).

The Eagle, the yearbook of  North Carolina College for Negroes (1940).

On 19 October 1942, George Washington Logan Jr., 24, of Camp Lee, Virginia, son of George W. Logan and Maude Lewis, married Alice Wilhelmina Jones, 22, of Wilson, daughter of J. Robert Jones and Alice Albright, in Prince George County, Virginia.

In the 1947 Durham, N.C., city directory: Logan Geo W jr (Alice J) asst mgr Regal Theatre r 601 E Lawson

In the 1950 census of Durham, Durham County, N.C.: theatre manager George Logan Jr., 31; wife Alice, 29; and children George III, 6, Wenda C., 3, and Bonnie D., born in July.

Alice Wilhelmina Jones Logan (1918-2022).

We celebrate the life of Alice Jones Logan who reached the end of her beautiful journey on August 5, 2022, at the incredible age of 103. Alice was born on October 25, 1918, to J. Robert and Alice Albright Jones in Wilson, North Carolina. She graduated from North Carolina College for Negroes (now North Carolina Central University) in Durham in 1940 with a BS Degree in Home Economics. After her 30-year career of teaching in the Durham Public Schools at James A. Whitted Junior High School and Hillside High School, she retired in 1983. In 1990, she was inducted into the Society of Golden Eagles at North Carolina Central University. She was extremely proud and looked forward to attending the induction ceremony each year and never missed the event since her induction.

“Alice had a love for flowers and enjoyed taking special care of her roses in the garden. The Pinochle Club, nicknamed ‘The Squirrels,’ and the Junior Mother’s Club were among her many pastimes. As a longtime member of White Rock Baptist Church in Durham, she recently enjoyed its services on YouTube, a technology she thought was amazing. She enjoyed the Big Band music of her generation. Her favorite songs were ‘On the Sunny Side of the Street’ and ‘It Don’t Mean a Thing (If It Ain’t Got That Swing).’

“Alice is preceded in death by her husband, George W. Logan, Jr. Her memory shall be cherished and shared by her son, George W. Logan, III of Durham; daughters, Wenda L. Ashford (Ronald) of Boston, MA and Bonnie D. Logan of Baltimore, MD; ‘special’ daughter, Thomasine Bass Perry of Durham; a granddaughter, Judge Tamara W. Ashford of Alexandria, VA; niece, India Cooke of Oakland, CA; nephews, J. Robert Jones, III of Wilson, NC, David B. Cooke (Betty Jo) of Atlanta, GA, and William Pearson (Stephanie) of Durham; two great nephews, J. Robert Jones, IV and Jamar Jones, of Las Vegas, NV; and countless friends.

“A Celebration of Life will be on Monday, August 15, 2022, at 1:00 PM at White Rock Baptist Church, 3400 Fayetteville Street, Durham, NC.”

Lane Street Project: Police open investigation at Vick Cemetery. UPDATED.

Have our worst fears come true?

A profound thank you to Castonoble Hooks for sounding the alarm about worsening erosion at Vick Cemetery; to Olivia Neeley and Drew Wilson of the Wilson Times, whose immediate investigation spotted what may be bones in the ditch; and the Wilson city and county officials who quickly reported to the scene today.

If these dry bones are human, whether recent or ancestral, we honor the memory of the deceased and commit ourselves to ensuring a more peaceful rest for this person and all who lie in Vick Cemetery.

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Mercifully, the bones are not human. Nonetheless, we urge the City to take steps to address the erosion issue at Vick Cemetery, starting with additional ground-penetrating radar of the public right-of-way. Human bones have been found in these ditches before. We can forestall more.