Thursday, December 28, 2023

Honoring Natchez U.S. Colored Troops

 

I was honored to join Home with Heroes volunteers and the Wreaths Across America campaign in honoring the U.S. Colored Troops on Friday, Dec. 15, 2023, at Natchez National Cemetery. Here I'm pictured at the grave Landsman Wilson Brown, a Medal of Honor recipient.

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Smokye Joe Frank is winner of 2024 Historic Preservation Award

By Roscoe Barnes III
Natchez, MS, USA / ListenUpYall.com
Dec 27, 2023 | 8:29 AM
Joseph "Smokye Joe" Frank is the winner of the 2024 Historic Preservation Award presented by the Natchez Historical Society.

NATCHEZ, Miss. – Joseph “Smokye Joe” Frank, a retired archaeologist and local historian, is the winner of the 2024 Historic Preservation Award presented by the Natchez Historical Society.

Karen Hill, the society’s president, shared the news at a recent board meeting.

“On behalf of the Natchez Historical Society, I am so pleased that we could honor Smokye Joe for his archaeological and historical contributions,” she said. “His work over the years has played a vital role in helping us to better understand and appreciate our history.”

The Historic Preservation Award honors individuals or organizations who have made a significant contribution to historic preservation or the study of history within the Natchez area.

When Frank learned of his selection for the award, he said he was flattered. “I Just turned 80 this year,” he said. “There are places I want to go and get back to in order to do the actual field work. But at my age, I simply can’t do it. This recognition makes a difference. It makes turning 80 not as bad. It makes growing old worthwhile.”

Frank said the last time he was surprised in this way was in 1980, when he was selected to sit on the Louisiana National Register of Historic Places Review Committee.

The preservation award will be presented to Frank at the society’s 2024 Annual Dinner at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 23, at the Natchez Grand Hotel, 111 N. Broadway St.

Frank currently serves on the Natchez Preservation Commission. He is also a tour guide at Elms Court and Hope Farm. He previously served as an officer with the Natchez Historical Society.

In 2004, the Mississippi Archaeological Society honored him as the winner of the Calvin J. Brown Award. Several years ago, he was also awarded the L.B. Jones award by the Mississippi Archaeological Association for his years of contributions to Mississippi Archaeology.

Frank’s work as an archaeologist in Natchez started in the early 1960s, a year after he graduated from Cathedral High School, where he played football.

“In 1962, Robert S. Neitzel, archaeologist, gave me a job digging at the Grand Village of the Natchez Indians,” he recalled. “That made up my mind. From then to the spring of 1970, I worked, went to school, and looked for Natchez Indian sites.”

For six years during the 1960s, Frank served with the Mississippi National Guard. In the spring of 1970, he graduated from Northwestern State University with a Bachelor of Arts degree in history and anthropology.

The next year found him working with Dr. Jeff P. Brain of the Peabody Museum, with whom he assisted with a Lower Mississippi Survey and spent his summer surveying the Natchez Bluff. During this time, he took college students to visit his sties. One of those students was Ian W. Brown, who is now professor emeritus in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Alabama.

Brown recounted: “In 1971 and 1972, Smokye was a major aid to Jeffrey P. Brain’s Lower Mississippi Survey’s operations surveying the Natchez Bluffs. This was a Peabody Museum, Harvard University project. It was at that time that Vin Steponaitis and I got to know Smokye very well, as he was constantly tracking down new sites for us.”

Brown said Frank also conducted research with Dr. Elizabeth Boggess, another respected archaeologist in Natchez. Boggess refers to Frank as her “colleague and dear friend.” She said that she was only a graduate student when they were assigned to check on all the previously recorded archaeological sites in this area.

“Over the years, I realize that I probably learned more from him than from any of my professors!,” she said.

In 1976, Frank graduated from Northwestern with a master’s degree in social studies with an emphasis on anthropology.

Frank’s work as an archaeologist can be seen in various locations in Natchez and Adams County. In 2015, he spearheaded efforts that resulted in the Adams County Board of Supervisors designating the portion of Lower Woodville Road — from Col. John Pitchford Parkway to the Sibley post office — as the Tunica Trail Tricentennial Bypass.

Frank said that what is now known as Lower Woodville Road was at one time a trail used by the Tunica Indians. “The early travelers labeled it the Tunica Trail,” he said.

Prior to this designation, Frank successfully led efforts to have Morgantown Road designated as the Natchez and Hamburg Railroad Company Memorial Byway.

In addition to his work in Mississippi, Frank served as an officer in the Southwest Louisiana Archaeological Society and in the newly formed Louisiana Archaeological Society.

During the 1990s, Frank worked with the Natchez Trace Archaeologist of the National Park surveying the last nine miles of the uncompleted development of the Natchez Trace Parkway into Natchez.

When surveying a site, “the goal is to determine whether human occupation ever occurred there,” Frank explained. He said the work involves, among other things, going out and selecting an area, looking at the land, walking the land, looking for artifacts, digging test holes, studying plants, studying geological information, and putting the information in a report.

Surveying also involves researching the history of the property, going back as far as one can, he said.

Since his retirement from the State of Louisiana in 2001, Frank continues to do research on various projects. In addition to looking for Natchez sites, he is retracing the Natchez and Hamburg Tracks.

Between 2001 and 2010, Frank assisted an archaeologist on sites on Fort Rosalie and The Natchez Trace.

Jessica Crawford, southeast regional director for The Archaeological Conservancy, and longtime friend of Frank, applauded his achievements.

“In 1971, he helped search for the Tunica Treasure, and he’s recorded hundreds of sites,” she said. “I know he deserves many accolades!”

For more information on the society’s 2024 annual dinner and the presentation of Frank’s award, visit natchezhistoricalsociety.org or call 281-731-4433 or 601-492-3004.

 


Filmmaker confirms the late Gwendolyn Johnson’s military service with ‘Six Triple Eight’

By Roscoe Barnes III
Natchez, MS, USA / ListenUpYall.com
Dec 27, 2023 | 8:16 AM


World War II veteran Gwendolyn Freeman Johnson is pictured here with members of her unit. She is in the second row, third person from the right.

NATCHEZ, Miss. – Filmmaker James William Theres believed for some time that the late Gwendolyn Freeman Johnson was a member of the World War II unit known as the “Six Triple Eight,” but his belief was based on anecdotal evidence. On Thursday, Dec. 7, 2023, Theres learned from Johnson’s military records that she was indeed a member of the mostly Black female unit that played a vital role in the war.

“This journey has been filled with excitement,” said Theres. “Working with the National Cemetery Administration to track down Mrs. Johnson’s service discharge record from 1946 was so rewarding.  And now working with the family to have her headstone reflect her military service is one of the highlights of my career.”

Ben Tucker, an Army veteran and volunteer with Home with Heroes, recently laid a wreath on Gwendolyn Freeman Johnson's grave during the Wreath Across America campaign.

Theres said his initial views about Johnson’s status were based on the research by Vietnam veteran Marsha Holder, who penned a biographical note about Johnson on Findagrave.com.

As a member of the 6888th, Johnson is posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal for her service. The medal, according to Theres, is U.S. Congress’ highest expression of national appreciation for distinguished achievements and contributions by individuals, institutions or groups. The legislation for the medal was signed into law by President Biden in March 2022.

Johnson’s daughter, Nazarita Franklin of Vicksburg, said she was thrilled to learn about the recognition given to her mother.

“She would be very touched and proud of this honor,” she said. “It was not just about her, but over 850 other women who served. She was very proud of being a veteran, and she was very happy to go overseas. She kept a lot of pictures and different mementos from her time in the military.”

Nazarita’s daughter, Bridget Franklin of Memphis, said she was “incredibly proud” of her grandmother. “She told me different stories about her service when we were growing up. She was extremely proud of the work she did. This (medal) is a very nice honor,” she said.

‘No Mail, Low Morale’

Johnson’s records show that she was a Private First Class in the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion. According to Theres, she was one of the 855 women in the first and only predominantly black female battalion who served in Europe during World War II. Among other achievements, he said, her battalion cleared a two-year backlog of mail and helped process for delivery more than 17 million pieces of mail near the end of the war.

Image of Gwendolyn Freeman Johnson in military uniform during World War II. Johnson served with the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion, which is known as the "Six Triple Eight." It was the first and only predominantly Black female battalion that helped process for delivery more than 17 million pieces of mail near the end of the war.

Six Triple Eight” was the nickname given to Johnson’s battalion, whose motto was “No Mail, Low Morale.” The Army Women’s Foundation website notes: “The unit served at home and in Europe where they sorted and routed mail for millions of American service members and civilians. By dividing their work into shifts that ran 365 days a week, the women processed an average of 65,000 pieces of mail per shift. On 15 March 2016, the U.S. Army Women’s Foundation inducted the 6888th Central Postal Directory Battalion into the Army Women’s Hall of Fame.”

When it comes to the Six Triple Eight, one cannot overestimate their importance to the military and to the United States’ history, said Theres. He suggested their work had a significant impact on the morale of U.S. servicemembers and their families, even during a time of racial segregation in the military.

Theres is the director and producer of “The Six Triple Eight,” which he showed in November at the Natchez Museum of African American History and Culture.

Johnson, who passed in 2017 at the age of 92, is only one of two women from Natchez who served with the 6888th. The other was Louise R. Bruce (1913-1996). Both women are interred at the Natchez National Cemetery.

Now that Johnson’s military history has been verified, her family can have her headstone updated to show her service with the 6888th. “If the family desires, the National Cemetery Administration will process the newly-discovered paperwork to change the headstone at the gravesite where she’s buried with her Army husband to reflect her military service as well,” Theres explained.

Her military service

Johnson’s military history is provided on her discharge document known as the “Report of Separation” form. Interestingly, however, the form appears to be partially burned, which suggests that her records may have been part of another historic event.

“It looks like the edges of the form are burnt, which is amazing because that means the document survived the great military records fire in 1973 in St. Louis when millions of records were lost,” said Theres. “It’s another cool piece of history to add to her journey.”

Johnson was born in 1924, in Iowa. When she enlisted in the military in July 1944, she was living in Chicago, Ill., according to her military records. During her tour of duty, she worked as a clerk typist.

The family said Johnson was stationed at in Rouen, France, when she met her husband, James Johnson, who was assigned to a transportation division, along with his twin brother, John. Gwendolyn Johnson was a member of the Women’s Army Corps, which was known as WAC.

Gwendolyn Johnson was honorably discharged in March 1946. Her records note that she was awarded the Victory Medal, the European-African-Middle-Eastern Ribbon, two Overseas Service Bars, and Good Conduct Medal.

Gwendolyn moved to Natchez, her husband’s home, after the war, her daughter said. As for her career as a civilian, her family said that she worked a short time as a postal worker in Natchez. “As far as I know, she was the first black woman to work at the Natchez post office,” Nazarita said.

Gwendolyn spent many years working in other fields. According to the family, she worked as a financial officer for AJFC Community Action Agency before retiring in 2000.

Image of Gwendolyn Freeman Johnson in her later years. Johnson passed away in October 2017 at the age of 92.

“Even though she was not born in Natchez, she was always proud of Natchez,” Nazarita said, noting that over the years, she enjoyed her relationship with extended family in Natchez. Renza Grennell, mother of former Natchez Mayor Darryl V. Grennell, is Gwendolyn’s niece.

Nazarita said that in addition to serving her country, Gwendolyn lived a life that had a profound influence on her family and her community.

“She was very proud of her service to our country,” she said. “She instilled in us the belief that serving your country is a good thing, and she encouraged us to see that working with your community is both necessary and honorable.”


Late barber Jessie “Jeff” Winston honored with historical marker

By Roscoe Barnes III
Natchez, MS, USA / ListenUpYall.com
(Dec 22, 2023 | 2:07 PM)

 

On the back row from left are Alderwoman Valencia Hall and her sister, Ursula Hall; Valerie Smith, friend of Helen Winston; Christopher Owens, grandson of Jessie Winston; and Mayor Dan Gibson. In the front, from left are the daughters of Jessie Winston: Helen Winston, Diane Butler, and Betty Malone. His daughter, Dorothy Winston, the mother of Christopher, is deceased.

NATCHEZ, Miss. –  A new historical marker honoring the legacy of the late Jessie “Jeff” Winston — who was known as the oldest barber in Natchez — will be part of the city’s Self-Guided African American History tour.

The marker is located at Winston’s home at 81 E. Franklin St., a few yards east of the Natchez Stew Pot. It is also the site of the barbershop that he opened behind his home in 1942.

The late Jessie Winston (1910 - 2020) worked as a barber for 89 years. He was 101 when he gave his last haircut. He was considered the oldest barber in Natchez.

Mayor Dan Gibson, Alderwoman Valencia Hall, and members of Winston’s family dedicated the marker Thursday, Dec. 21, in a special ceremony in front of the Winston property. They were joined by friends and others from the community.

“Since the beginning of our administration, we have been working to better tell our whole story and feature those individuals who have made a lasting impact on Natchez,” said Gibson. “Mr. Winston’s long life and amazing career as a barber is an inspiration to all of us.

“How fitting it is that we should celebrate this occasion, and this new marker, on the eve of what would have been his 113th birthday.”

Winston was born on Christmas Day in 1910. He died on April 15, 2020, at the age of 109.

The mayor thanked Winston’s daughter, Helen Winston, for her “persistence in honoring Mr. Jeff’s historic life.” He said Jessie Winston was Natchez’s oldest citizen and “quite possibly one of the longest serving barbers in our nation’s history.”

In a dedication ceremony led by Mayor Dan Gibson on Thursday, Dec. 21, this historical marker was unveiled at the home of the late Jessie "Jeff" Winston at 81 E. Franklin St. Winston's barbershop is located behind the home.

Jessie Winston was 101 when he gave his last haircut, according to Helen Winston. She said he “cut hair for 89 years,” which reportedly made him the longest-working barber in the City of Natchez.

Helen Winston said that she and the Winston family are all happy about the marker and the recognition shown to her father. “I am so overwhelmed,” she said. “ This is a blessing to the family. I am grateful to Alderwoman Valencia Hall and Mayor Dan Gibson for making this possible.”

Helen Winston said she was in Walmart one day when she approached Hall about doing something to honor Jessie Winston. Three days later, she heard back from Hall, who said she had met with the mayor and that a marker would be approved.

Helen Winston said her father will be remembered for his “good works” and for being “good to a lot of people.” When people without money came for haircuts, he told them not to worry about it, she said.

“He was a happy camper,” Helen Winston recalled. “He loved to laugh.”

Following Thursday’s ceremony, the Winston family gave a tour of the barbershop to the mayor and others who wanted to know more about Jessie Winston’s history.

Jessie Winston worked for many years at Armstrong Tire and Rubber Company, from where he retired. Over the years, people would ask him about the secret to his longevity. His reply, said Helen Winston, was a verse in the Bible: “Honor thy father and mother that thy days may be long.”

Hall described Jessie Winston as a “devoted husband and father and spiritual individual.”

“It is most fitting that Mr. Jeff, as he was affectionately known, be memorialized with this historical marker in front of his home and barbershop,” she said on Friday.

Hall noted he “was not just a barber for 89 years of his 109 years of life, but a fixture in the community and friend to many a boy, man, woman, and girl.” He was fortunate in many ways, she explained, adding “he died at the age of 109 with all of his faculties.”

For a life that was long and well-lived, Hall said of Jessie Winston, “Well done, Faithful Servant!”

The self-guided history tour, of which the Winston property is now a part, features nearly 30 sites related to African American history. The project was unveiled in a special ceremony in February 2023. The tour is a joint initiative of the City of Natchez and NAPAC Museum. Gibson has said the project is one of many ways through which the city is telling its complete history.

Tuesday, December 19, 2023

Natchez Historical Society announces 2024 Annual Dinner Meeting

David Nolen of MSU will be the featured speaker

David Nolen, professor
Mississippi State University


The Natchez Historical Society will hold its 2024 annual dinner at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 23, at the Natchez Grand Hotel, 111 N. Broadway St. Reservation and payment deadline is January 14. For the first time, payment will not be accepted at the door. Registration and cash bar will begin at 5:30 p.m. and dinner at 6:30 p.m.

David Nolen, professor and associate dean for Archives and Special Collections at Mississippi State University and former Librarian of its Grant Library, will be the featured speaker. He will speak on the topic, “Catching the Rabbit: U.S. Grant and the Vicksburg Campaign.”
 
Reservation and payment may be made online at natchezhistoricalsociety.org; or send payment by mail to Natchez Historical Society, P. O. Box 49, Natchez, Miss. 39121. Please include names and phone numbers with checks.
 
Dinner is $37 per person (regular and vegetarian options available). Membership dues for 2024 also may be included: $20 per person or $35 per couple. For more information, call 281-731-4433 or 601-492-3004.

Monday, December 18, 2023

Civil rights pioneer Anne Moody to be part of the Mississippi Freedom Trail

By Roscoe Barnes III
Natchez, MS, USA / ListenUpYall.com
Dec 15, 2023 | 4:13 PM

 

Anne Moody's book, "Coming of Age in Mississippi," has remained in print since the first day it was published in December 1968.

CENTREVILLE, Miss. — The Town of Centreville has been approved for a Mississippi Freedom Trail marker that will honor the legacy of Anne Moody and her work in the civil rights movement of the 1960s, announced John Spann, program and outreach officer for the Mississippi Humanities Council.

Spann shared the news Thursday, Dec. 14, following a meeting of the Freedom Trail Scholarly Review Committee.

The memorial to Moody will be the first Freedom Trail marker erected in Wilkinson County. The location has not been determined, but it will be posted in 2024, according to Spann.

The Mississippi Freedom Trail was created to commemorate the people and places in the state that played a pivotal role in the American Civil Rights Movement. As of Dec. 14, a total of 35 new markers have been approved. The Freedom Trail markers are managed by the Mississippi Humanities Council, with partnership and funding provided by Visit Mississippi.

Anne Moody (1940-2015)
Photo by Jack Schrier

Moody’s family, along with Centreville residents, business and community leaders, were ecstatic about Moody receiving a Freedom Trail marker.

“This is exciting news,” said Frances Jefferson, Moody’s sister. “This will certainly help the current generation to understand the importance of her work for civil rights and her legacy.”

Felicia Williams, Moody’s cousin and former Centreville Alderwoman, said the marker will be good for Centreville and for Wilkinson County.

“I was elated to receive a phone call informing me that Anne Moody would be honored on the Mississippi Freedom Trail,” she said. “This is not just an honor for her and her family but also for the Centreville community. Anne suffered greatly for a cause in which she believed in and a cause that now allows African Americans to live the long talked about American dream.”

Moody, who was born and raised in Centreville, was a civil rights activist and the author of “Coming of Age in Mississippi,” which chronicles her life as a poor Black girl growing up under Jim Crow. The book also provides riveting accounts of her work in the struggle for civil rights.

In raw details, Moody wrote about the sacrifices that she and others made in the fight for freedom and justice. She also recounted the challenges and threats she faced during nonviolent protests to register voters and desegregate public spaces.

In 2021, her work as a writer was officially recognized on the Mississippi Writers Trail. A historical marker recognizing her work was posted and unveiled in The Louis Gaulden and Riquita Jackson Family Memorial Park in Centreville.

Moody died at her home in 2015 at the age of 74. At the time of her death, she was living in Gloster, a small town located nine miles north of Centreville.

The Reverend Larry Lee, former mayor of Centreville, said he is happy to see Moody recognized on the Freedom Trail.

“The Mississippi Freedom Trail Marker for Anne Moody is a great honor to mark the trail blazed through her sacrifice and contribution during the Civil Rights Movement,” he said. “Anne Moody is an icon for those who wanted justice, freedom and hope for communities suppressed by the challenges of racism in Mississippi. I am grateful to the Committee for choosing to bestow such a great honor in memory of Anne Moody.”

Guy McNabb, president of the Centreville Chamber of Commerce, agreed. “This is great news!” he said. “Centreville Chamber of Commerce is honored to have given our letter of  support for a historic event such as this.”

McNabb said the chamber is proud to be a partner for this project.

Support for the marker was echoed by Centreville Town Clerk Kimberly Montgomery. “This is wonderful news,” she said. “Although we were hoping to recognize Mr. Samuel O’Quinn with this significant marker, I am equally thrilled to further recognize the works of Anne Moody.”

Montgomery said the new marker will undoubtedly “help to keep the history of Centreville relevant.”

Photo by Chrissy Wilson
Woodville African American Museum

See more at: https://listenupyall.com/2023/12/15/civil-rights-pioneer-anne-moody-to-be-part-of-the-mississippi-freedom-trail/


Friday, December 15, 2023

Donnan’s Barbershop building approved for Mississippi Freedom Trail Marker

By Roscoe Barnes III 
 
The Natchez Democrat
(Published 4:07 p.m., Thursday, Dec. 14, 2023)

Willie Carter of Natchez stands in front of the two-story building that once served as the meeting place for the Natchez Deacons for Defense and Justice. Carter is the current owner of the building which is now home to two small businesses. The barbershop is where the Deacons organized in September 1965 under the leadership of President James "Big Jack" Jackson, who worked as a barber. (Photo taken in February 2022./Submitted Photo

NATCHEZ, Miss. -- The building once used as a meeting place for the Natchez Deacons for Defense and Justice will be the site of a second Mississippi Freedom Trail Marker in Natchez, announced John Spann, program and outreach officer for the Mississippi Humanities Council. He shared the news Wednesday, Dec. 13, following a meeting of the Freedom Trail Scholarly Review Committee. 

Spann said the committee felt the application for the marker, which was prepared by the Natchez Civil Rights Trail Committee, was “compelling” and the site was “definitely deserving of being on the Freedom Trail.” 

The building is located at 319 N. Dr. M. L. King St. (formerly Pine Street). It is a two-story wood-frame structure that housed the Donnan’s Barbershop on the first floor in the 1960s. The barbershop is where the Deacons organized in September 1965 under the leadership of President James “Big Jack” Jackson, who worked as a barber. 

“We are excited to bring the story of the Deacons for Defense to the Mississippi Freedom Trail,” said Spann. “Stories like theirs give a different perspective of the movement that is seldom discussed. It’s important to the Freedom Trail Committee to add markers that uplift unknown people, events, and nuance essential to the Mississippi freedom movement. Telling this story of organized armed defense of civil rights activity and leaders of this state, fits our mission.” 

Willie Carter, who worked as a shoe-shiner in the barbershop in the early 1960s, and later as a barber, is the current owner of the building.  

When he worked at the site, the building was owned by Leon Donnan, he said.  According to Ser Seshsh Ab Heter-Clifford M. Boxley, a former Deacon, Donnan “was extremely influential on the civil rights strategy.” 

Carter said he was happy to learn that Donnan’s Barbershop is being recognized for its role in the civil rights movement in Natchez.  “I am grateful,” he said. “It gives me great pride to know that this barbershop was allowed to be part of the Natchez movement that enabled Black people to have freedom and be recognized in the society. 

“I appreciate the contributions of the people in our community whose work and sacrifices got us to where we are today. I’m also thankful that Leon Donnan allowed the Deacons to use his barbershop for their meetings. I’m grateful to have been a part of this important movement.” 

Mayor Dan Gibson suggested the recognition is one of many ways in which the city of Natchez is working to tell its complete history. 

“Since the beginning of our administration, we have been working to tell a more inclusive history of Natchez,” he said. “Up until then, our city was not even listed as on our state’s Freedom Trail or on America’s Civil Rights Trail. This now will be the second marker placed in Natchez in less than one year, placing us solidly on both trails. I am so grateful. And I applaud the work of those who have been working to make this happen. Telling our whole story is key to bringing our city together as One Natchez.” 

Natchez’s first Freedom Trail marker was unveiled in April this year at the Dr. John Banks House at 9 St. Catherine St.  In 1965, the house served as the headquarters for the Natchez Branch of the NAACP. It was also the home of NAACP George Metcalfe who used it as a boarding house for civil rights workers. 

NAPAC Museum Director Bobby Dennis said the announcement of Donnan’s Barbershop being recognized is good news for Natchez.  He suggested there is much to be told about this barbershop and the people who came through it. 

“It was a gathering place of civil rights workers and educators, as well,” he said, noting many prominent people in the African American community frequented the door of the barbershop. “The barbershop was the hottest spot for most of the people who had any role in the civil rights movement,” he said. 

The Deacons for Defense was a civil rights paramilitary organization of African Americans who provided armed protection for civil rights workers and the Black community.  It was founded in 1964 in Jonesboro, La., in response to the terror and violent acts of the Ku Klux Klans against civil rights activists. 

The Natchez Deacons organized soon after the attempted assassination of NAACP George Metcalfe, whose car was bombed by members of the Ku Klux Klan on Aug. 27, 1965, in the parking lot of Armstrong Tire and Rubber Company. Metcalfe survived the bombing with major injuries. 

In a February 2022 interview, Boxley said Donnan’s Barbershop played an important role in the civil rights movement.  He said it was a command post and observation point used by the Deacons to keep an eye on the Klan, among other things. 

Boxley said the Deacons aided the Natchez movement in becoming one of the most successful movements in the South.  Because of this success, Natchez became a model for other communities in Mississippi.  According to historians, the  impact of the Natchez Deacons was felt throughout the state as they established chapters in other areas, including Wilkinson and Jefferson counties. 

Historian Akinyele Omowale Umoja noted: “The Natchez Deacons became an essential ingredient in the Natchez and the Mississippi movements…..Without a doubt, the Deacons made the Natchez and Mississippi movements more effective.” 

The Mississippi Freedom Trail was created to commemorate the people and places in the state that played a pivotal role in the American Civil Rights Movement.  As of Dec. 14, a total of 35 new markers have been approved.  The Freedom Trail markers are managed by the Mississippi Humanities Council, with partnership and funding provided by Visit Mississippi.

Read more at: https://www.natchezdemocrat.com/2023/12/14/donnans-barbershop-building-approved-for-mississippi-freedom-trail-marker/

 

 

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Visiting The Legacy Museum in Montgomery, Ala.



On Dec. 7-8, 2023, I was honored to join this team of historians, museum leaders, and educators for a visit to The Legacy Museum, The Monument at the Peace and Justice Memorial Center, and The National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Ala. All made possible by the Mississippi Humanities Council




Facing History: Exploring Natchez History through the faces of prominent leaders in the past

Article published in the Nov/Dec 2023 issue of Natchez Magazine

By Roscoe Barnes III




This is my article about sculptor Bob Willis and the work he’s doing in telling the history of Natchez, Miss., through his clay. His work is simply amazing! Over the last few years, he has sculpted busts of important leaders in Natchez's history. These leaders include Hiram Revels, the first African American to serve in the U.S. Congress, and John Roy Lynch, a former slave who became a military officer, lawyer, and member of the U.S. House of Representatives.

See full article here: https://shorturl.at/ahoR8




Monday, December 11, 2023

Sunnyside presents bust of its builder, Rev. William Watkins

By Roscoe Barnes III, Visit Natchez

Natchez, MS, USA / ListenUpYall.com
Nov 22, 2023 | 3:43 PM

 

Sculptor Bob Willis and Sunnyside Bed & Breakfast owner Colleen Wilkins celebrate the recent unveiling of Willis' bust of the Rev. William Hamilton Watkins. Watkins built Sunnyside as a parsonage in the 1850s.

NATCHEZ, Miss. – Despite facing a serious storm on Monday evening, a group of friends and visitors came out to see the unveiling of Bob Willis’ bust of the Rev. William Hamilton Watkins (1815-1881) at Sunnyside Bed & Breakfast at 102 Rembert St.


“Rev. Watkins is the most important subject that we talk about during our tours,” said Sunnyside owner Colleen Wilkins. “Everybody was just amazed when they saw the bust. They were amazed by the likeness. It was so perfect, and it matches the photo so well. Everybody was struck by the resemblance.”

Watkins was the Civil War-era preacher who built Sunnyside as a parsonage in the 1850s. As pastor of Jefferson Street Methodist Church, he was known as a preacher of conviction and the minister who conducted the funeral service for William Johnson, the “Barber of Natchez,” in 1851, according to Wilkins.

“There is a story with Rev. Watkins,” said Wilkins. “We dedicate our tours to talking about the history of Rev. Watkins. After I saw his bust, I knew this would be just the thing to put an exclamation point on the end our story. We can now point to the bust and say, ‘This is a likeness of him sculpted by Bob Willis.’”

Willis is a retired pastor and grief counselor who lives in Oklahoma. He’s been a sculptor for almost 30 years. He and his wife, Lynn, are frequent visitors to Natchez, a place, he said, they absolutely love. Over the years, he has sculpted several important figures from the city’s history.

Earlier this year, Zion Chapel A.M.E. Church commissioned Willis to sculpt a bust of Hiram Rhodes Revels, the first African American to serve in the U.S. Congress. Revels was also an early pastor of Zion Chapel and the first president of Alcorn A&M College, which is now Alcorn State University, in Lorman. The church unveiled Revels’ bust during a special ceremony on Sept. 30.

Wilkins said she learned of Willis’ work through her friend, Ann Elizabeth Kaiser, who oversees The Manse at 307 South Rankin. The Manse houses three of Willis’ sculptures.

“She wanted me to meet him and so she brought him over,” Wilkins recalled. “He showed me pictures of some of the things he’s done. It’s unbelievable what he can do.”

In a recent post on Facebook, Kaiser commented on a photo of Watkins’ bust shared by Wilkins. “Amazing!” she wrote. “We have so many historical figures in Natchez to remember! Your tourists at Sunnyside will surely love and appreciate this beautiful art piece along with learning about Dr. Watkins. Perfect for our tourism industry! Can’t wait to see the sculpture in person!” 

Colleen Wilkins, owner of Sunnyside Bed & Breakfast, displays bust of the Rev. William Hamilton Watkins, that was sculpted by Bob Willis of Oklahoma.

Colleen Wilkins, owner of Sunnyside Bed & Breakfast, displays bust of the Rev. William Hamilton Watkins, that was sculpted by Bob Willis of Oklahoma.

Wilkins said the bust will be placed in the entryway of Sunnyside. “I want everyone to see what beautiful work Willis does and hopefully have a bust sculpted of someone they love and respect. I think anybody who sees his work will be amazed.”

Watkins was born on April 11, 1815, in Jefferson County. Willis said he was an ordained Methodist Episcopal minister who served congregations in Natchez, Woodville, Jackson, and Vicksburg. He also served for two years as president of Centenary College in Jackson, La. (now located in Shreveport, La).

Watkins and his wife, Elizabeth, had eight children. During the Civil War, he was arrested for treason and spent time, possibly several months, in a prisoner of war camp until the end of the war.

Wilkins recounts his story as follows:

When the Union troops were camped at the top of the hill at Rembert and St. Catherine streets, a Union soldier by the name of Jones became friends with the Watkins family. Watkins’ daughter, Hattie, fell in love with him.

One day Jones was nearby when Confederates came to Watkins for assistance. They ask if he would contribute money, food, arms, and clothing to the Confederacy. Watkins agreed to help. His oldest son was fighting in the war, and he hoped that some of his contributions would get to his son.

Jones, however, reported Watkins to the Union Army, and in 1865, Watkins was arrested and charged with treason. According to reports, he was roughly treated. He reportedly said that he had never been so deceived in his life as by Jones.

During his trial, the commandant told Watkins that the crimes for which he was charged are punishable by death. Watkins replied, “I know nothing of the laws of war, only the gospel of God.”

Watkins’ bail was set at $10,000, which is equivalent to about $188,755.21 in 2023. Because he only made $1,100 a year (about $20,763.07 in 2023), he could not come up with the money. Consequently, he remained incarcerated until the end of 1865, when he was released along with the POWs. Once released, he went on to minister in Jackson, Vicksburg, Woodville, and other places.

Watkins died on Feb. 5, 1881, in Jackson. He was 65. He is buried at Cane Ridge Cemetery in Lorman, Miss.

 See more by following this link:

https://listenupyall.com/2023/11/22/sunnyside-presents-bust-of-its-builder-rev-william-watkins/

 

 

 

Natchez is featured in The Washington Post



I’m excited to report that Natchez, Miss., is featured in The Washington Post.
 
I’m pleased to be mentioned along with others, including Debbie Cosey, Mayor Dan Gibson, and Carter Burns, in this important article. I am personally grateful to reporter Sarah Enelow-Snyder, who did a magnificent job.
 
See story here:
https://bit.ly/3GBet0h


84th commemoration of Rhythm Night Club fire slated for Saturday, April 27

Monroe Sago is pictured with the historical  marker that tells the story of the Rhythm  Night Club Fire. Monroe and his wife, Betty Monroe, ...