Wednesday, September 29, 2021

F.F. Bosworth’s House Recently Up for Sale

Building was once the site of fervent spiritual activity

By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
Author, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind “Christ the Healer”
Copyright © 2021
 
#FFBosworth
#BosworthMatters 

Photo from Zillow


Historian Robert Pears sent me a note recently (Tuesday, Sept. 21, 2021) with an interesting bit of news about F.F. Bosworth’s time in Zion City, Ill.

“I don't know if you are aware, but F. F. Bosworth's house is for sale in Zion, Illinois,” he wrote. "On Zillow you can actually see it and the inside.”

The two-story structure at 2810 Elisha Ave. was listed as having six bedrooms and two bathrooms. It had a listing price of $158,800. As of Tuesday, Sept. 28, 2021, it was listed as "Off Market."

Pears, who heads Pure Hearts Ministries, included this link: https://www.zillow.com/homes/2810-Elisha-Ave-Zion,-IL-60099_rb/4754158_zpid/

Another listing appeared on Apartments.com at https://www.apartments.com/2810-elisha-ave-zion-il/edjjfsp

When I contacted Pears about this news, he noted it was one of many things he’s been working on.

“I have done in-depth research into [John Alexander] Dowie, Evan Roberts, and other heroes of faith,” he wrote in an email. “I am working on a book. I found an old postcard of Michigan Avenue that shows Dowie’s headquarters there in the late 1890s.”

Bosworth’s home played a significant role in the Pentecostal movement that broke out in Zion. Sarah E. Parham, wife of Charles F. Parham, said Bosworth’s home was a common place for fellowship and prayer meetings. In the book, The Life of Charles F. Parham (1930), Sarah writes about her husband’s visit to Zion City in 1906 and his search for a place to hold meetings.

When Mr. Parham entered the city, it was impossible to obtain a building to hold a meeting in as all doors were closed against him. His first meeting was held in a private room at Elijah Hospice (hotel) at the invitation of the manager. The next night two rooms and the hall way were crowded out and from that time onward the meetings increased in number, attendance and power.

He then began cottage meetings and many of the best homes in the city were opened for meetings. Fred F. Bosworth’s home was literally converted into a meeting house. On some Sundays, morning and evening, four rooms have been closely packed with people at one time, generally uniting in one meeting, but sometimes for a few minutes being divided into three separate testimony meetings until a hymn begun in one room would be taken up in the others until the whole assembly was welded into one body of praise. I am sure those who participated in the divine enthusiasm of these meetings will never forget their sweetness and power. I was permitted to be in the cottage meetings the following winter, and know how the dear people of Zion City did worship God in spirit and in truth as their hungry hearts were filled with the Holy Spirit.

Given the amount of spiritual activity that took place in this home, it should probably be designated as a historic landmark or listed on the National Register of Historic Places. With the right amount of publicity, it could also become a nice tourist attraction.

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Note: My book, F.F. Bosworth: The Man Behind "Christ the Healer," can be purchased
here with a 25% discount. Use the discount code (all caps): BOSWORTH25.
 
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For more information:
Visit the F.F. Bosworth page here. Questions about the research and commentary on F.F. Bosworth may be directed to Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D., via email at doctorbarnes3@gmail.com or roscoebarnes3@yahoo.com. For updates on F.F. Bosworth history, simply follow this blog or @bosworth_fred and @Roscoebarnes3 on Twitter. #ChristTheHealer #BosworthMention #BosworthMatters
 

Tuesday, September 28, 2021

Natchez Museum of African American History & Culture Featured in MHC Newsletter (September 2021)

#VisitNatchez


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MHC Outreach: Natchez Museum of African American History and Culture

 
Our American Rescue Plan grant rounds have ended and award packets have been dispersed to 51 different cultural organizations across the state. One institution awarded funding is the Natchez Museum of African American History and Culture.
 
The Museum was organized by the Natchez Association for the Preservation of African American Culture and opened in 1991. The Museum was an idea cultivated and manifested by a group of phenomenal black women led by Mary Lee Toles. This group, along with others, understood the rich history of Black people in Natchez and the importance of preserving that heritage. As a result, the Museum’s goal was not just to tell the stories of African Americans who made Natchez what it is today, but also to safeguard artifacts that aid in that storytelling.
 
New Executive Director Bobby Dennis (pictured above with MHC outreach & program officer John Spann) is eager to continue that legacy of preservation and truth-telling. With ARP grant funds and continued partnership from the Mississippi Humanities Council, he plans to update exhibits, bring in more technology, and acquire different means to preserve and display artifacts. As COVID-19 case numbers subside, he hopes to offer more in-person programming to continue uplifting the stories of the Black people of Natchez.
 
“The museum’s slogan is, ‘We exist to tell our story,’” says Dennis. “Those words are both accurate and fitting for the museum because it does have a story to tell.”
 
From the slavery experience to the life and work of acclaimed literary figure Richard Wright, along with unsung histories like the Rhythm Night Club Fire and Dr. John Banks, the first African American doctor in Natchez, the museum shines a light on the contributions of African Americans to the growth of Natchez and the nation. MHC’s continued partnership with the Natchez Museum of African American History and Culture will help bring more of these unsung stories to light, enriching visitors’ knowledge of Natchez as a whole.

For more information on the Mississippi Humanities Council, visit http://mshumanities.orgTo learn more about this museum, please follow this link: https://visitnapac.net/

Saturday, September 25, 2021

New Brochure Tells Story of The Dr. John Banks House

#VisitNatchez
#JohnBanksHouse


I'm really excited about this new brochure being released by The Dr. John Bowman Banks Museum, which is commonly known as The Dr. John Banks House. Once the phone number and email address are added, it will be ready for publication. Editorial assistance was provided by Visit Natchez and the Historic Natchez Foundation. It was designed by Catherine Murray of Murray Printing in Natchez.


Wednesday, September 22, 2021

The Turning Angel of Natchez, Miss.

By Roscoe Barnes III, PhD
 
#VisitNatchez
#TurningAngel

The Turning Angel

My colleague, Katie Ernst, and I were driving around Natchez looking for the Devil’s Punch Bowl when we came upon Cemetery Road. I was commenting on the beauty of the Natchez City Cemetery when she pointed to a striking white figure, a tall angel monument, just off the side of the road.
 
“That’s the Turning Angel,” she said.
 
I looked over and saw the angel standing above five headstones.
 
“Why is it called the Turning Angel?” I asked, squinting to get a better look.
 
“People believe that when you drive past it at night, and your headlights hit it at a certain angle, she appears to turn.”
 
“Did you ever see her turn?”
 
“When I was a teenager, my friends and I would drive up and down the road at night just to see if she would turn,” Katie said. She chuckled. “Yes, she appeared to turn.”
 
“Wow,” I said. “That caught me off guard.”


Roscoe Barnes III, PhD

Apparently, it’s an optical illusion and one I will try to see for myself and shoot a video of my findings.
 
The story about the Turning Angel is well known in southwest Mississippi, but in the mid-2000s, it generated world-wide acclaim because of the writings of Natchez author Greg Iles, who titled his best-selling novel, “Turning Angel (Thomson Gale, 2006).
 
The story of the Turning Angel is a sad one. It’s about an explosion that occurred on March 14, 1908, at the Natchez Drug Company that resulted in the deaths of five employees, most of whom were teenagers.
 
The company’s five-story brick structure was located at the corner of Main Street and South Union Street. The employees who died were all young ladies: Carrie Murray, 22, Ada White, 19, Inez Netterville, 17, Luella Booth, 17, and Mary Worthy, 12.




The owner of the company reportedly became so distraught over the tragedy that he purchased the gravesite for the young ladies and the monument of the angel to watch over them. Today she stands proudly and majestically, looking calmly over the five headstones of the ladies whose lives were cut short in that 1908 tragedy.
 
On the back base of the monument, the following words are etched in all caps:
 
“ERECTED BY THE NATCHEZ DRUG COMPANY TO THE MEMORY OF THE UNFORTUNATE EMPLOYEES WHO LOST THEIR LIVES IN THE GREAT DISASTER THAT DESTROYED ITS BUILDING ON MARCH 14, 1908. 

CARRIE O. MURRAY
INEZ NETTERVILLE
LUELLA D. BOOTH
MARY E. WORTHY
ADA WHITE

“Thy will be done.”


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Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D., is the Cultural Heritage and Tourism Manager at Visit Natchez.

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

My Visit to the Nellie Jackson's House

Tour given by the building's new owner, J.T. Robinson

#VisitNatchez



I’m here at the famous Nellie Jackson's House. It was once the site of a long-running brothel that was owned and operated by Nellie Jackson (1902-1990).
 
Perhaps you’ve heard about it or read about it in books and other publications. Maybe you saw the film, “Mississippi Madam: The Life of Nellie Jackson” (2017). At any rate, the building’s new owner, Mr. J.T. Robinson, graciously gave me a tour of the house. He noted the house was one of the filming locations in the movie, “Get on Up” (2014), which was shot in Natchez.
 
While discussing his plans to restore it, Robinson shared some of the colorful stories from Jackson’s life history. In addition to running a brothel, she reportedly served as an FBI informant during the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. It is believed that she helped to track down the KKK.
 
Jackson died a tragic death in 1990 when a customer entered the house and poured gasoline on her and lit a fire that resulted in her death, as wells as his own. She was 87.
 
#VisitNatchez
 
Note: You can read about Robinson’s plans for the house by visiting here.
 


Sunday, September 5, 2021

Great Meeting with Mimi Miller of the Historic Natchez Foundation

 #VisitNatchez

Mimi Miller, executive director emerita of the Historic Natchez Foundation (far right), is a wealth of knowledge and a valuable resource on the history of Natchez. On Thursday, Sept. 2, 2021, I had the honor of meeting with her to review historic photos about the Dr. John Bowman Banks Museum and the Civil Rights Movement in Natchez. Also pictured, from left: Dora Hawkins and Jacqulyn Williams, representatives of the John Banks House. Miller is to my left. In addition to being one of the most helpful and reliable historians around, she is a great storyteller. She also has a great sense of humor. I truly appreciate all of her help, as well as the help we receive from Carter Burns, the executive director of the Foundation.


#VisitNatchez

The Natchez Democrat: More than $30K in grants awarded to Natchez museums

Published 9:05 am Saturday, September 4, 2021

By Staff Reports


Monroe Sago is reflected in pictures taken from the family scrapbook of Paul Stott, one of the musicians killed in the Rhythm Night Club fire on April 23, 1940. The family sent Sago the scrapbook from California for display in the museum on St. Catherine Street. (File photo | The Natchez Democrat)

NATCHEZ — Three Natchez museums will receive more than $30,000 of funding this year through the ARP Humanities Recovery Grant program offered by the Mississippi Humanities Council.

The museums and the amounts awarded to them are The Rhythm Night Club Memorial Museum, $14,160; Natchez Museum of African American History & Culture, $12,200; and The Dr. John Banks House Museum, $12,000 — which altogether is a total of $38,360 awarded to Natchez.

These awards are part of more than $450,000 awarded by the Mississippi Humanities Council to 36 different cultural organizations, historical societies and museums recover from the financial hardships of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The funds were provided by U.S. Congress through the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, which engaged MHC along with 55 other state and territorial humanities councils, to support America’s cultural sector.

Roscoe Barnes III, cultural heritage tourism manager for Visit Natchez, said he was ecstatic when he learned of this news.

“These museums play an important role in our community,” he said. “They have stories about our past that are crucial to understanding our history. These are stories that will be meaningful to people of all races and backgrounds.”

Barnes said that he and Visit Natchez are honored to have played a role in assisting them with the grant applications.

For more information about this program, visit mshumanities.org.


Friday, September 3, 2021

Official of Miss. Humanities Council visits Natchez in support of three local museums

#VisitNatchez

African American Museum

John Spann, left, the program and outreach officer for the Mississippi Humanities Council, is pictured here with Bobby Dennis, executive director of the Natchez Museum of African American History & Culture.

NATCHEZ, Miss. – An official of the Mississippi Humanities Council (MHC) recently came to Natchez to offer support for three of its local museums.

John Spann, the program and outreach officer for MHC, spent Tuesday, Aug. 24, meeting with representatives of The Rhythm Night Club Memorial Museum, The Dr. John Banks House and the Natchez Museum of African American History & Culture. He was joined by Roscoe Barnes III, the cultural heritage tourism manager for Visit Natchez.

While touring the museums, Spann praised the museum staff for the work they’ve done and assured them that MHC is ready to “partner with them” for the long term. He asked each of them about their specific needs and their goals for telling their story. He also spoke with them about funding through various grant programs.

“This past trip to Natchez was the first of many for the humanities council,” said Spann. “We hope to work with more museums and historical sites that uplift stories essential to Natchez and Mississippi in the future.”

Monroe and Betty Sago, who own and operate the Rhythm Night Club Memorial Museum, said they were very pleased with Spann’s visit.

“He was right on time with what he was saying,” said Monroe. “This was the first time that someone from the state came to the museum and offered to help us. He was very positive and very clear about the things we can do to grow and to receive funding and other support for various projects.”

Spann said he was impressed by the museums and what they have to offer. “The evidence of resilience, affluence, and freedom within the African American Community of Natchez is shown within the museums and historic sites I visited during my trip,” he said. “I was happy to know that these stories are being preserved and uplifted by local people and the humanities council desires to help them continue doing that in various ways.”



Rhythm Night Club

John Spann, right, program and outreach officer for the Mississippi Humanities Council, is pictured here with Monroe and Betty Sago, owners of The Rhythm Night Club Memorial Museum.

According to Bobby Dennis, the executive director of the African American museum, his meeting with Spann was enlightening, as well as encouraging. “It gave us the opportunity to allow one of our partners to visualize the direction of where our museum is going,” he said.
Spann’s contributions will undoubtedly help the museum succeed in giving “a more complete history of the African Americans in Natchez,” Dennis said.

When Spann visited the Dr. John Banks House, he met with three of the museum’s staff members: Dora C. Hawkins, Jacqulyn B. Williams and Thelma Newsome.

“It was our pleasure to welcome Mr. John Spann and Dr. Roscoe Barnes when they visited the museum,” said Hawkins. “It was apparent that tremendous research had been done by both parties, and they were able to bring very valuable information and resources about the museum to which we were not aware.”

The museum staff asked questions of Spann, which he gladly answered. They said they were delighted to receive the tips he gave about attracting tourists and improving their exhibits. They also appreciated his talk about grants. Hawkins noted the meeting was especially timely, as “we are preparing to introduce the world to this well-researched history.”

Spann looked back on his visit to Natchez as time well spent. He noted the city’s rich cultural heritage and suggested this town on the river is bursting with potential.

“Having successful and meaningful outreach trips, like what I experienced in Natchez, is why I love my position,” he explained. “The relationships established by the humanities council will be built on trust and understanding that hopefully encourage local museums across the state to continue telling their stories.”   

According to MHC Executive Director Stuart Rockoff, the council has been serving Mississippi for 49 years. “We take pride in working with museums and humanities organizations across Mississippi to help them preserve and share our state’s vital stories,” he said.




Dr. John Banks House

John Spann, program and outreach officer for the Mississippi Humanities Council, recently visited Natchez to offer support for three of its local museums. He is pictured here with staff members of The Dr. John Banks House. From left: Dora C. Hawkins, Thelma Newsome and Jacqulyn B. Willliams.

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Roscoe Barnes III, Ph.D., is the Cultural Heritage and Tourism Manager at Visit Natchez.


New Mississippi History Now article published

( Click on image to enlarge. ) This announcement appeared in the MDAH Weekly Update newsletter (11.18.24). See article at this link: http://...