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Hamilton Burial Garden in peril.

Wilson Times posted this article to its Facebook page a few days ago, and the furor was immediate. The condition of Hamilton Burial Garden is tragic, and, given my Lane Street Project work, I understand the pain and bewilderment family members are experiencing. I also feel deeply for the cemetery’s nominal new owner, LaMonique Hamilton, who is saddled ad infinitum with a financial burden she neither created nor sought.

In the ’70s, ’80s, and ’90s, when citizens were demanding that the city meet its obligations to public Vick Cemetery, opponents snapped, “Why didn’t families take better care of their loved ones? Why did they let the cemetery go?” This was ludicrous criticism in the context of a city-owned cemetery left out of the revenue stream to which African-Americans paid fees and contributed tax dollars year in, year out. This article illustrates how this response is equally useless in the context of private cemeteries. Hamilton Burial Garden today is Rountree and Odd Fellows Cemeteries 75 years ago. With the meager income from past burials long gone, few new burials, relatives scattered across the country, and owners who have either died out or are too aged or infirm to do the work themselves, the grass grows ever higher, the vines thicker, the trees taller. A single Southern summer is enough to obliterate a lawn, and no single family can stop the slide.

The issue is not unique to African-American cemeteries. Google “are perpetual care cemeteries forever” for some truly depressing reading. As shocking and painful as the realization is, the $500 or $1000 or $5000 paid for a plot ten or twenty or forty years ago cannot cover cemetery upkeep as long will be necessary. (Contrary to the article, Hamilton Burial Garden was founded around 1981, when Lamont Hamilton purchased the property. Newspaper obituaries show burials as early as February 1982.)

LaMonique Hamilton has forthrightly laid out Hamilton Burial Garden’s realities. She is seeking your ideas about how to address ongoing needs for care. How can the community help prevent another Odd Fellows?

Wilson Times, 29 July 2025.

Theirrell Hagans celebrates her third birthday.

Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 6 April 1940.

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  • Theirrell Theresa Hagans

In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 1002 Mercer Street, drugstore delivery boy Charles Hagans, 21; wife Cleora, 19; and daughters Therrol, 3, and Lula Mae, 7 months.

In the 1950 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 206 North East Street, Charlie Kendall, 63, widower; Cleora Hagans, 27, cook, lodger, and her daughters Therrell, 13, and Lula M., 10.

  • Marjorie R. Bynum

In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 1000 Mercer Street, gardener Herbert Bynum, 55; wife Ella, 48; daughter Mabel, 21; and granddaughter Marjorie, 2.

  • James Patrick

In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 919 Mercer Street, James A. Patrick, 29, “professional minister”; wife Josephine, 29, day work at redrying plant; and children Emily Dorothea, 10, Joyce Gloria, 5, and James Alexander, 3.

  • Jean Watson

In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 919[?] Mercer Street, James Watson, 29; wife Golden, 30; and daughters Earnestine, 11, Bessie Jean, 4, and Lucy Gray, 1.

  • J.D. Wooten

 

Naomi Freeman mourned.

Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 27 July 1940.

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In the 1920 census of Wilson township, Wilson County: on Saratoga Road, Oliver N. Freeman, 38; wife Willie May, 31; and children Naomi, 8, Oliver N. Jr., 7, Mary F., 5, and Connie, 4.

In the 1930 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 1300 East Nash Street, valued at $6000, Oliver N. Freeman, 48, building contractor; wife Willie May, 41, born in Tennessee; and children Naomi, 18, Oliver N. Jr., 17, Mary F., 16, and Connie H., 14.

Naomi O. Freeman died 20 July 1940 in Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina. Per her death certificate, she was born 3 September 1911 in Wilson to Onstus Freeman and Will May Haddie; was single; was a Sunday school missionary; and was buried in Rountree Cemetery [likely Vick Cemetery], Wilson.

Death claims S.H. Vick.

 Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 27 July 1946.

John H. Mincey was an occasional correspondent to Norfolk’s regional African-American newspaper, the Journal and Guide, and it fell to him to write an obituary for Samuel H. Vick. Some of the facts are a little off, but the piece reveals little-known  details like Vick’s desire to study medicine.

Taylor-Stokes nuptials.

Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 30 April 1949.

Mary Joyce Taylor and Franklin Stokes were married 9 June 1949 in Wilson.

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In the 1930 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 610 East Green Street, rented for $20/month, barber Roderick Taylor, 45; wife Mary, 39; and children Edna G., 8, Mary J., 4, and Roderick Jr., 1.

In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 607 East Green Street, barber Roderick Taylor, 58; wife Mary J., 50; and children Edna G., 18, Mary J., 14, and Roderick Jr., 12.

In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 1208 Atlantic, barber James Stokes, 45; wife Viola, 35; and children Frank, 18, tobacco factory laborer, Dorothy, 14, Thomas, 12, Annie M., 9, Jannie L., 7, Donnie, 5, and Carlton, 4.

In 1942, Frankin Roosevelt Stokes registered for the World War II draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 21 November 1921 in Troupland [Treutlen] County, Georgia; resided at 1208 Atlanta [sic] Street; his mailing address was Carter Hall, Johnson C. Smith University, Charlotte; and his nearest relative was James Stokes, 1208 Atlanta Street.

On 9 June 1949, Frank Stokes, 26, of Wilson, son of James Stokes and Viola Reese Stokes, married Mary Joyce Taylor, 23, daughter of Roderick Taylor and Mary John Taylor, in Wilson. Presbyterian minister O.J. Hawkins performed the ceremony in the presence of Johnnie K. Boatwright, Sue Faucette, and Frances E. Williams.

In the 1950 census of Boulder, Boulder County, Colorado: at the University of Colorado,  Franklin R. Stokes, 28, lodger.

In the 1955 Boulder, Colorado, city directory: Stokes Franklin R (Joyce M) lab Maaco Puget Sound h 1906 Pearl

Mary Joyce Taylor Stokes Crisp died 26 September 2006 in Mount Clemens, Michigan.

Obituary of Mary Joyce Taylor Stokes Crisp, vickfuneralhome.com

Johnson C. Smith University’s Student Union building was renamed in Crisp’s honor.

Campus map, Johnson C. Smith University.

Franklin R. Stokes died 21 December 2006 in Denver, Colorado.

Obituary of Franklin R. Stokes, Newcomer Cremations, Funerals, Receptions.

Pioneer educator dies.

Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 9 May 1942.

Sallie Barbour‘s credit as Wilson County’s earliest proponent of the Rosenwald Fund is an interesting detail in this obituary. It’s also puzzling. The Stantonsburg School was in Stantonsburg. The Stantonsburg Street School, formerly known as the Colored Graded School and later formally renamed for Barbour, was on Stantonsburg Street in Wilson, but was built well before the Rosenwald era.