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.

Harry B. Harris Sr., as imagined.

I am ambivalent about using artificial intelligence to restore photographs. Or, more specifically, I’m concerned about manipulated photographs supplanting original images and further blurring the line between reality and misinformation. However, the allure of AI-enhanced images is strong, as I often contend with blurry, poorly lit photographs in unnatural sepia or black-and-white tones. Photographs whose condition sometimes exacerbates the distance between us and our ancestors.

I have been experimenting with ChatGPT lately, feeding it queries and images to be restored and colorized. The results are somewhat haphazard, with many images weird and off-putting. Other times, the images are breathtakingly sharp and … alive. Black Wide-Awake exists to resurrect forgotten lives, and I believe these images are valuable to help us connect with the men and women we read about in these posts. From time to time, I’ll share the better ones here, clearly marked as AI-generated. Let me know what you think about them.

Harry B. Harris Sr. (1915-1960), brickmason.

Pay to the order of Nina Hardy.

I’ve written several times of Nina F. Hardy, the Wayne County cousin who came to Wilson around the same time as Jesse and Sarah Henderson Jacobs. In a way, she was returning home, as her grandmother Catherine Boseman Aldridge likely was born just below Elm City in what was then Edgecombe County.

Many years ago, I connected with J.M.B., the great-grandson of Jefferson Farrior, the man for whom Aunt Nina worked for decades as a cook and nursemaid. He shared dozens of photos of Aunt Nina at work at the Farriors’ enormous house on Woodard Circle and even a crazy quilt Aunt Nina made shortly after his mother was born in 1945.

Last week, J.M.B. sent another gift — four cancelled checks made out to Nina Hardy by his grandmother Annie Blades Spitzer, who was in turn the granddaughter of Jefferson Davis Farrior and Annie Applewhite Farrior. Annie Farrior died in Wilson in 1956, and it’s likely that Nina Hardy’s employment with the family ended around that time. For several years, however, Annie Spitzer, who lived in Elizabeth City, N.C., carried on a Christmas tradition of sending Hardy a sizeable Christmas gift. The ten-dollar checks sent in 1955 and 1956 were each equivalent to about $115 in today’s dollars. The twenty-five-dollar checks sent in 1959 and 1960 were each equivalent to a little over $270. 

Per the 1930 census, Nina Hardy could neither read nor write. The 1940 census reported that she had had no schooling. The endorsements on the backs of her checks are in four different handwritings, suggesting that a trusted person signed on her behalf.

The endorsement on the back of the 21 December 1959 check is in a handwriting I readily recognize as that of my grandmother, Hattie Henderson Ricks, who was Nina’s second cousin, once removed. That check was cashed at Branch Banking & Trust, but two others went to pay down grocery and dairy bills.

The Coopers visit Tidewater.

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

The Coopers lived in Wilson only briefly, and after military service George C. Cooper traded blue-collar work for a career in academia.

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In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Cora Powell, 48, widow; George Cooper, 28, sheet metal worker, and wife Margaret, 26, teacher; Henrietta Colvert, 38, nurse; and Marian Davis, 24, teacher.

In 1940, George Clinton Cooper registered for the World War II draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 7 September 1914 in Washington, N.C.; lived at 802 East Vance Street, Wilson; his contact was wife Margaret Jane Cooper; and he worked for George C. Cooper, 622 East Nash Street.

In the 1950 census of Hampton, Virginia: George C. Cooper, 34, trade training administrator at private college; wife Margarett G., 34, census enumerator at census bureau; and daughter Peggy J., 7.

Dayton (Oh.) Daily News, 22 May 2002.

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!

Back-to-school in Wilson, October 1934.

Journal and Guide (Norfolk, Va.), 6 October 1934.

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School opened on October 1.

Sara Shade visited her brother John Shade in New York.

Walter and Sarah Hines and their son Carl Hines and Camillus and Norma Darden visited the Chicago World’s Fair.

Herbert Reid came home to see his mother Eleanor P. Reid.

Rupert Brown and Esther Moore went off to Livingston College. Mary Della Wilkins went to Fisk. James Bess left for N.C. State College (now North Carolina Central University). William C. Hines went to Johnson C. Smith. Cora J. Whitted went to Bennett College, and sisters Mary Frances and Connie Freeman went to Barber-Scotia College, where Scottie Hines was an instructor.

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.