The obituary of Arlando R. Dawson of Cleveland, Ohio.

The Charlotte News, 12 April 1980.

Arlando R. Dawson was another of the accomplished children of Alexander D. and Lucy Hill Dawson.

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In the 1910 census of Wilson, Wilson County: restaurant cook Alexander Dawson, 50; wife Lucy, 49; and children Sophie,  25, school teacher, Mattie, 23, stenographer, Virginia, 19, school teacher, Lucile, 17, Alexander, 15, Clarence, 13, Augusta, 11, and Arlander, 1.

In the 1916 Hill’s Wilson, N.C., city directory: Dawson Orlando (c) film opr h 505 E Vance

In 1918, Arlander Richard Dawson registered for the World War I draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 26 August 1900; lived at 121 Pender Street, Wilson; worked as a waiter at Girard Hotel, 44th Street, New York City; and his nearest relative was A.D. Dawson, 121 Pender Street.

The Charlotte Observer, 3 May 1923.

In the 1929 Winston-Salem, N.C., city directory: Dawson Arlando R (c) tchr Columbian Hghts Sch bds 636 Bruce

Clementine Azalee Dawson, daughter of Arlando and Clementine Hill Dawson, was born 23 June 1929 in Charlotte, Mecklenburg County.

In the 1930 census of Winston-Salem, Forsyth County, North Carolina: at 636 Bruce Street, lodgers William B. Stinson, 22; Arlando R. Dawson, 29; and George F. Newell, 24; all public school teachers.

Also, in the 1930 census of Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina: school paper editor William Hill, 58; wife Alice, 50; daughter Clementine Dawson, 23, school teacher; granddaughter Clementine A. Dawson, 7 months; and mother Caroline Hill, 85, widow.

In the 1934 Winston-Salem, N.C., city directory: Dawson Arlando R (c) tchr Atkins High Sch h 1422 Hattie av

In the 1940 census of Cleveland, Cuyahoga County, Ohio: at 10121 South Boulevard, city school teacher Arlanda Dawson, 36; wife Clementine, 31; and daughter Azalea, 10.

In 1942, Arlando Roween Dawson registered for the World War II draft in Cleveland, Ohio. Per his registration card, he was born 26 August 1902 in Wilson, N.C.; lived at 10121 S. Boulevard, Cleveland; worked for the Cleveland Board of Education; and his contact was Clementine H. Dawson.

Clementine Hill Dawson died 15 July 1943 in Cleveland.

Call and Post (Cleveland, Oh.), 31 July 1943.

Arlando Dawson remarried in 1948.

Call and Post (Cleveland, Oh.), 19 June 1948.

In 1953, he and his daughter were oddly featured in a Call and Post article, “Cleveland Father-Son Teams Are Doubly Proud”: “‘Through a daughter’s marriage, fathers inherit sons,’ believes Arlando Dawson of South Boulevard. Dawson is an English teacher at Kennard Junior High school and his daughter, Mrs. Azalea Dawson Wagner, is a teacher at R.B. Hayes Elementary school. He holds a B.A. from Johnson C. Smith University, Charlotte, N.C., and the M.A. from Western Reserve. A graduate of West Virginia State College, Mrs. Wagner is working on her M.A. at Kent State University.”

Call and Post (Cleveland, Oh.), 20 June 1953.

Minceys testify in support of a pension application.

In 1892, Greene County, N.C., native Caleb Williams’ children filed an application to receive pension benefits. Williams, who had been enslaved by Isaac Williams, had enlisted in Company H, 14th Regiment, United Colored Heavy Artillery, in 1865.

Two men with Wilson County ties testified in support of the claim. On 3 June 1892, 56 year-old Prince Minshew of Snow Hill, Greene County, swore that he knew Williams was in the United States Army and that he was present at Williams’ death.

On 30 August 1892, Prince Minshew gave a second statement alongside Judie Ham of Shine, Greene County. They attested that they had been witnesses to the marriage of Caleb Williams and Patsey Minshew in 1865, but the couple had lived as man and wife long prior.  They also identified three of the couple’s children — Alice Williams, Absalom Williams, and Annie Williams Fields.

Within a few years, Prince Minshew and his family moved to Wilson, shifting their surname slightly along the way. In the 1900 census of Wilson town, Wilson township, Wilson County: farmer Prince Mensey, 60; wife Susan, 52; children Ben, 19, Emma, 19, and Oscar, 12; and niece Rosetta Mensey, 7. Prince Mincey’s son Ben, of course, was famed Chief Mincey of the Red Hot Hose Company. Prince, Ben, and Oscar Mincey — and likely other family family members — are buried in a family plot in Odd Fellows Cemetery.

On 25 October 1904, Lewis Mincey, 60, of Wilson also provided an affidavit. He had been born enslaved on the William Edmundson plantation, which was near the Isaac Williams plantation on which Caleb Williams was held. He recalled Caleb Williams’ marriage to a woman named Jane, who died on Haywood Edmundson’s plantation. Williams then married Lewis Mincey’s sister Patsey Mincey. Caleb Williams died of “lung troubles” in 1874; Patsey Mincey Williams died in 1887.

In the 1880 census of Wilson, Wilson County: on Barnes Street, farm worker Louis Minshew, 47, and wife Anna, 30.

In the 1910 census of Wilson, Wilson County: on Moore Street, odd jobs laborer Louis Minsey, 75, and wife Annie, 60. [Mincey reported that both parents were born in Virginia.]

In the 1920 census of Wilson, Wilson County: on Moore Street, gardener Lewis Mency, 70, and wife Annie, 72.

Lewis Mincey died 6 March 1923 in Wilson. Per his death certificate, he was 63 [sic] years old; was born in Greene County, N.C., to Jack Mincey and an unnamed mother; was a widower; and had worked as a day laborer. He was buried in Wilson, N.C., and Benjamin Mincey was informant.

I suspect Prince, Lewis, and Patsey Mincey were siblings. Prince Mincey named a son “Jack,” apparently after their father. Prince’s son Benjamin was the informant for his uncle Lewis’ death certificate.

File #545736, Application of Minor Children of Caleb Williams for Pension, National Archives and Records Administration. Thank you, Trisha Blount-Hewitt, for bringing my attention to this file. For more details, see Trisha’s blogpost.

Warren burned badly in bed.

Wilson Daily Times, 1 January 1948.

Alexander Warren in fact succumbed three days later.

——

In the 1880 census of Wilson, Wilson County: laborer Pompee Warren, 54, wife Della, 26, and sons John, 12, and Alexander, 2.

In 24 December 1896, Alex Warren, 23, married Ida Davis, 22, in Wilson. Baptist minister W.T.H. Woodard performed the ceremony in the presence of Emma Burton, Mary Davis and Isaac Thompson.

In the 1900 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Elic Warren, 24; wife Ida, 25; and son John, 3.

In the 1910 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 367 Spring Street, ice factory blocker Alex Warren, 34, wife Ada, 36, and son John, 19, the latter two, factory workers.

In 1918, Alexander Warren registered for the World War I draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 13 August 1876; lived at 704 Spring; worked for R.P. Watson as a laborer; and his nearest relative was his wife. He signed his card ‘Alex Warren.’

In the 1920 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 704 Spring, Alec Warren, 43, tobacco factory worker; wife Ida, 47, tobacco factory worker; and son John, 11.

In the 1930 census of Wilson, Wilson County: on South Spring, Alec Warren, 51, R.P. Watson truck driver, and wife Ida, 53.

In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: on Walnut Street, widower John Parks, 49, laborer at tobacco redrying factory; children Beatrice, 27,  John Henry, 26, Ida Doretha, 22, Mark Alexander, 21, Helen Gray, 17, and Douglas Wright Parks, 15; children [sic] Fred Woods Jr., 9, Vivian Lavonne, 8, and George Randolph, 4; and father-in-law Alexander Warren, 63.

Alexander Warren died 4 January 1948 in Wilson. Per his death certificate: he was born about 1879 in Wilson County to Pompie and Della Warren; had worked as a laborer; resided at 403 E. Walnut Street; and was buried at Rountree cemetery. His neighbor John Parks of 405 E. Walnut was informant.

The obituary of Florence Everette.

Wilson Daily Times, 31 November 1945.

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Florence Everett died 27 January 1945 in Wilson. Per her death certificate, she was 65 years old; was born in Johnston County, N.C., to Henry Smith and Harriett Green; lived at 802 Happy Hill; was a widow; worked in farming; and was buried in Rountree Cemetery.

Rev. Richard D. Dunn, doing great service to create better feeling between the races?

The Day (New London, Conn.), 27 July 1925.

I have not identified which Missionary Baptist church Richard D. Dunn pastored. Maybe because … he was actually an A.M.E. Zion minister?

Charlotte News, 9 April 1928.

Asheville Citizen-Times, 30 March 1929.

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In the 1880 census of Contentnea Neck township, Lenoir County, North Carolina: on Harper River Road, farmer Richard Dunn, 52; wife Martha, 44; children William, 26, Jennie, 21, Sarah, 15, Manoah, 14, Robert, 12, John L., 9, Richard, 5, and Martha, 2; and grandson Herman, 2.

In the 1900 census of Falling Creek township, Lenoir County: Richard Dunn, 24; wife Qunce Ann, 22; and children John, 5, Almeter, 3, and Charlie, 1.

In the 1910 census of Falling Creek township, Lenoir County: on Harper River Road, Richard Dunn, 34; wife Quincey Ann, 30; children John, 15, Almeta, 13, Charlie, 11, Noah, 8, Lillian B., 7, and Rosa A., 2; and Pearlie Johnson, 22, widow.

In the 1922 and 1925 Hill’s Wilson, N.C., city directory: Dunn Richd Rev (c) h 800 E Nash

In the 1930 Hill’s Wilson, N.C., city directory: Dunn Richd Rev (c; Annie) h 220 (140) Ashe

In the 1930 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 140 Ashe, rented for $13/month, church minister Richard Dunn, 50; wife Annie, 43; children Rosa, 21, tobacco factory stemmer, Hattie, 17, and Burl, 14; and grandchildren Rosa L., 4, and Annie M., 2.

In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Richard Dunn, 64; wife Annie, 58, washing; daughter Rosa, 24, tobacco factory stemmer, and son Burrell, 23, tobacco factory laborer.

Lillie B. Dunn died 10 April 1941 at Mercy Hospital, Wilson. Per her death certificate, she was 36 years old; was the widow of Raymond Ried; lived on Spruce Street; was born in Kinston, N.C., to Richard Dunn of Snow Hill, N.C., and Annie Gardner of Kinston, N.C.; and was buried in Rountree Cemetery.

Annie Dunn died 27 May 1948 at her home at 112 North East Street, Wilson. Per her death certificate, she was born 25 June 1884 in Lenoir County, N.C., to Quincey Gardner and Mariah Bryant; was the widow of Richard Dunn; and was buried in Rest Haven Cemetery. Quincey Gardner, 708 Suggs Street, was informant.

Undertaker.

Page 31, 1922 Sanborn fire insurance map of Wilson, N.C.

Which undertaker operated this business at the corner of Nash and Carroll Streets shown in the 1922 Sanborn fire insurance map of Wilson?

Almost certainly, this was the establishment of one of the undertaking businesses with which Amos Batts was associated. Batts lived next door at 1113 East Nash Street and was in business around this time with Columbus E. Artis. In an era in which the deceased were generally laid out at home, the building likely was used for embalming and preparation, but not actually funerals.

Newspaper carriers given a party.

Wilson Daily Times, 7 January 1949.

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  • 301 Club
  • Ritz Theatre
  • Frank Jackson
  • William Harris — in the 1950 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 312 Finch, Benjamin Harris, 55, brick mason foreman; wife Pauline, 49; and children William, 24, brickmason, Agnes, 18, and Ben Jr., 15.
  • Ben Harris Jr. — see above.
  • James Battle
  • Raymond Barnes
  • Lonnie Hagans — in the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: tobacco factory laborer John Becton, 63; wife Hattie, 58, tobacco factory laborer; son-in-law Lonnie Hagan, 31, hospital orderly; granddaughter Zelma, 31; and grandchildren Thelma, 7, Lonnie Jr., 4, and Hattie, 2.
  • Walter Robinson — in the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Lonnie Robinson, 40, truck driver at wholesale grocery company; wife Mary L., 38, beautician; and children Helen R., 20, housecleaner; Walter M., 14, Kathrine C., 12, and Hosea I., 9; and granddaughter Dianne, 1.
  • Alphonze Pone
  • Theodore Jackson — in the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 1203 Carolina, barber Theodore Jackson, 38; wife Sara, 34; and children Margaret L., 14, Thurman, 13, Louise, 12, Theodore, 7, and Doris, 5.
  • Willie Battle
  • Boyd Lee Lane — in the 1950 census of Wilson, Wilson County: James Buckhannon, 61, “plows gardens”; wife Anna, 55; nephew Edgar Snow, 22, farm helper; and grandson Boyd Lane, 14.
  • Freddie Delaney — in the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: WPA bricklayer George Deland [sic], 46; wife Mariah, 39; and children Lewis, 18, Willie, 15, Joyce, 12, Ray, 9, James D., 8, Ruby, 4, and Fred, 2.

Freddie Oliver Delaney (1937-1992).

  • Milton McPhail — in the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: post office janitor Jesse McPhail, 32; wife Minnie, 27; and children Jesse Jr., 8, Clarence, 7, Milton, 5, Geraldine, 4, Ester, 3, Nathaniel, 1, and Minora, 4 months.
  • Theodore Sanders — in the 1950 census of Wilson, Wilson County: on Norfolk-Southern Railroad Street, Lawyer Sanders Sr., 61, ditching for water line-street department for city; wife Beatrice R., 51, private service work; children Theodore, 16, Eloise, 12, and Mary Lee, 17; and grandchildren Velma L., 1, and Willie L., 1.
  • Robert Mincey — in the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: hospital orderly Madison Mincey, 25; wife Lalla Rook, 22; and children Elizabeth E. and Robert E., 3; Johnny M., 1; and Luther, 5 months.
  • Robert Barnes  

Photo courtesy of Michael Delaney.

Music teachers.

The 1912 Wilson city directory identified three African-American music teachers in town:

  • Theodosie Askew

  • Elba Vick

In the 1900 census of Wilson, Wilson County: postmaster Samuel H. Vick, 37; wife Annie M., 28; and children Elba L., 17, and Daniel L., 3; plus cousin Bessie Parker, 15.

In the 1910 census of Wilson, Wilson County: dealer in real estate Samuel Vick, 47; wife Annie, 38; and children Elma, 17, Daniel L., 13, Samuel E., 10, George, 7, Anna, 5, and Robert, 2.

In the 1916 Hill’s Wilson, N.C., city directory: Vick Elba (c) tchr h 623 E Green

On 26 December 1921, Carlos Valle, 28, of Durham, N.C., son of Celedonio and Leticia Valle, married Elba Vick, 27, of Edgecombe County, N.C., in Rocky Mount, Edgecombe County. Methodist minister A.P. Pearce performed the ceremony.

But also: on 12 July 1922, Carlos C. Valle, 29, of Wilson, married Elba L. Vick, 25, of Wilson, in Wilson. Presbyterian minister Arthur H. George performed the ceremony in the presence of Georgia M. Burke, A.B. Bowser, and James H. Battle.

In the 1930 census of Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee: at 572 Stephens, lodge secretary Carlos Valle, 37, born in “Porto Rico”; wife Elba, 33; and children Melba G., 6, born in New York, and Carlos Jr., 4, born in New Jersey.

In the 1940 census of New York, New York: at 111th Street, Colas Valle, 42, automobile trailer chauffeur; wife Elva, 40; and daughter Melba, 16. Carlos and Elba were described as white and born in Puerto Rico.

Elba Vick Valle died 28 December 1980 in Brooklyn, New York.

Family ties, no. 10: Reddick Jacobs?

Wilson’s emergence as a leading tobacco market town drew hundreds of African-American migrants in the decades after the 1890s. Many left family behind in their home counties, perhaps never to be seen again. Others maintained ties the best way they could.

Sarah Henderson Jacobs Silver and her husband Jesse A. Jacobs Jr. left Dudley, in southern Wayne County, North Carolina, around 1905. They came to Wilson presumably for better opportunities off the farm. Each remained firmly linked, however, to parents and children and siblings back in Wayne County as well as those who had joined the Great Migration north. This post is the ninth in a series of excerpts and adaptations of interviews with my grandmother Hattie Henderson Ricks (1910-2001), Jesse and Sarah’s adoptive daughter (and Sarah’s great-niece), revealing the ways her Wilson family stayed connected to their far-flung kin. (Or didn’t.)

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Jesse Jacobs Jr.’s first wife, Sallie Bridgers, died in 1895, shortly after the birth of their youngest child, Annie Bell.  A year later, he married Sarah Daisy Henderson, who reared Sallie’s children alongside her own daughter, Hattie Mae Jacobs, and her sister’s two children, Bessie Henderson and Jesse Henderson. Jesse’s sons, James Daniel Jacobs (1881-1952), Dock Davis Jacobs (circa 1888-1944), and Reddick Jacobs (1889-1921), were grown by time my grandmother came to live with Jesse and Sarah.  They were not her blood kin, but were family nonetheless. Each lived in Wilson for short stretches, with the younger two moving back and forth between North Carolina and New York City.

This is what my grandmother told me about Reddick Jacobs:

The other brother, the younger one. Reddick. He was one that got shot in the café. He was getting ready to leave, and say him and another fellow got to arguing, and the man shot him. Well, they brought him home. Papa was living then. They brought him home, and they had to bring the body up to the house. And me and [her sister] Mamie had to go examine it, you know. But I didn’t put my hands on him. I went in there and looked at him, and I said, “Well, where did he get shot?”  After he was all dressed up, laying out there in the casket.  And so Mamie said, she said, “Girl, don’t you see? They shot him right in his face. Right there.” And I said, “I don’t see nothing.” And then she had to put her finger right in his eye. And it was in his left eye. It went right in through there and come out the back of his head. He was sitting at the restaurant, and a fellow shot him.

Reddick Jacobs was buried in the Congregational Church cemetery in Dudley. His patched-up headstone stands near his father’s and records his death date as 28 November 1921, but I have not yet located his death certificate.

Last night, I happened upon this brief report of a police shooting in Wilson. The victim, Howard Jacobs, died 27 November 1922.

The Johnson City Staff (Johnson City, Tenn.), 28 November 1922.

Wait. Was this the report of Reddick Jacobs’ killing? Had the reporter misheard his first name — as so often happened? Had whoever bought his headstone misremembered his death date — also common?

Coincidences notwithstanding — no. Though Reddick Jacobs’ death certificate seems to have gone unfiled, Howard Jacobs’ was recorded, and he was not the same man as Reddick.

Howard Jacob died 27 November 1922 in Wilson. Per his death certificate, he was born in December 1904 in Clinton, N.C., to Theophus Jacob [Theophilus Jacobs] and Mary I. Hobbs; was single; lived on Viola Street; and worked in farming for John Wells. His cause of death was “homicide — shot by policeman.” Jacobs was buried in Moltonville, North Carolina.

Unsurprisingly, at inquest, the policeman was cleared of any wrongdoing. I can find nothing further about Howard Jacobs’ short time in Wilson. Though he was not a son of Jesse A. Jacobs Jr., both were likely members of the same large extended Jacobs family,  free people of color now closely (but not exclusively) associated with Lumbee and Coharie Indians.