Sgt. Sutton goes to Japan.

Wilson Daily Times, 2 September 1949.

——

In the 1930 census of Gardners township, Wilson County: farm laborer John Sutton, 30; wife Jane, 31; and children Haywood, 14, Mittie, 11, John, 9, and David L., 6.

In the 1940 census of Gardners township, Wilson County: farmer John Sutton, 41; wife Jane, 40; children Mittie, 21, John H., 19, David Lee, 16, Henry G., 6, and Nina Bee, 2.

In 1942, David Sutton registered for the World War II draft in Wilson County, North Carolina. Per his registration card, he was b0rn 1 July 1924 in Wilson County, North Carolina; lived at R.F.D. 3, Wilson; his contact was John Sutton; and he worked for John Sutton.

On 7 November 1946, David Sutton, 22, of Wilson, son of John Clarence Sutton and Jane Sutton, married Jessie Gray Newsome, 17, of Wilson, daughter of Richard L. Sutton and Mable Newsome, in Snow Hall, Greene County, North Carolina.

Jessie Gray Sutton died 30 July 1947 at Mercy Hospital, Wilson. Per her death certificate, she was one day old; was born in Wilson County to David Sutton and Jessie Gray Newsome; and was buried in Rest Haven cemetery.

In the 1950 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 211 South Vick Street (front), Redmond Barnes, 30; wife Mittie, 31, maid; children Jessie L., 8, Bernice, 6, and Redmond Jr., born in August; and in-laws John, 52, Jane, 53, and Nina B. Sutton, 12; and, in “back trailer,” Jessie G. Sutton, 22, and son David Jr., 1, born in Washington, D.C.

Founding fathers.

North Carolina Standard (Raleigh, N.C.), 2 May 1855.

Wilson County’s earliest appointed officials included some of the largest slaveholders in the county:

Elias Barnes’ 1856 estate included 55 enslaved people.

  • Washington Barnes

In the 1860 slave schedule of Saratoga township, Wilson County, Washington Barnes claimed five enslaved people.

  • Macon Moye

In the 1850 slave schedule of North Side of the Neuse, Wayne County, Macon Moye is listed with eight enslaved people. Though he does not appear in the 1860 slave schedule, in the 1860 population schedule of Saratoga township, Wilson County, Moye claimed personal property valued at $95,000. This estate would have been comprised overwhelmingly of enslaved people — and many dozens of them. Moye was a younger brother of county founder, sheriff, and slave trader Wyatt Moye.

In his father Etheldred Sauls’ 1859, Lawrence J. Sauls was bequeathed two enslaved people, Patrick and Jane, as well as control of four other enslaved people on behalf his sister Elizabeth E. Sauls Becton. Lawrence Sauls is listed in the 1860 slave schedule of Davis district, Wayne County, with two enslaved teenagers.

In the 1860 slave schedule of Wilson township, Wilson County, Joshua Barnes (brother of Elias Barnes above) claimed 66 enslaved people.

  • Dr. Alexander G. Brooks

In the 1860 slave schedule of Black Creek township, Wilson County, Dr. A.G. Brooks reported 29 enslaved people.

  • Robert Bynum

The 1850 federal slave schedule of Edgecombe County lists Robert Bynum with 19 enslaved people. In 1858, Robert Bynum inherited three enslaved people from his father Turner Bynum. By 1860, as reported in the Wilson County slave schedule, he claimed 46 enslaved people.

  • J.D. Rountree

In the 1860 slave schedule of Town of Wilson, Wilson County, J.D. Rountree is listed with 12 enslaved people.

  • George Howard Jr.

In the 1850 slave schedule of Edgecombe County, George Howard is listed with 11 enslaved people. In the 1860 slave schedule of Town of Wilson, Wilson County, Howard claimed eight enslaved people.

Where is the ball, and will it kill him?

It is difficult to know how to process this horrifying description of a severe brain injury caused by a gunshot wound to a boy’s head or his medical “treatment.” The child lived, however, and I hope he thrived.

Charlotte Home and Democrat, 21 April 1882.

Where we worked: Carolina Laundry.

Wilson Daily Times, 22 November 1915.

Wilson Daily Times, 23 April 1919.

Carolina Laundry employed dozens of African-American men and women during its decades of trade at the corner of Tarboro and Kenan Streets.

Ad from Hill’s Wilson, N.C., City Directory (1928).

  • Helen Branch, 1928
  • Mildred Branch, 1928
  • Julia Burden, 1928
  • Arthur Cobb, laundryman, 1928
  • Morton Crawford, 1928, laundryman, 1930
  • David Curry, 1928
  • James Debose, 1928
  • Maggie Dupree, 1928
  • Addie Edwards, 1928
  • John Gilmore, 1928
  • Elizabeth Hamilton, 1928
  • Benjamin Melton, presser, 1928
  • Harriet Myers, 1928
  • John Phillips, 1928
  • Cammie Richardson, 1928
  • William Richardson, helper, 1928
  • Maggy Rountree, 1928
  • George Sutton, 1928
  • Bessie Swift, 1928
  • Flossie Walker, 1928
  • Helen White, 1928
  • Edward Williams, cleaner, 1928

From “Facts about Wilson, North Carolina,” published by Wilson Chamber of Commerce (1934).

Recommended reading, no. 23: In the Pines.

We’ve read of J.C. Farmer, shot to death by a posse in his mother’s yard in 1946. The official version of the altercation that led to Farmer’s murder has never sat right with me, and Hale’s searing work helps me understand my discomfort. In this award-winning work, Hale explores white supremacy, violence, (in)justice, and her own family’s role in the murder of an unarmed Black man in piney-woods Mississippi.