The Daily Southerner, Tarboro, NC

Local News

September 2, 2010

Five from Edgecombe to enter Hall

TARBORO — Five individuals from Edgecombe County are among the next 10 inductees into the Twin County Hall of Fame.

The next class of members will be inducted on Thursday, Nov. 18 at the Dunn Center at N.C. Wesleyan College. This year’s inductees includes a congressman, a local business leader, several members of the arts including artist, author, and musician, a Medal of Honor recipient, along with people active in their communities.

More than 50 individuals were nominated from various professions. Five will be honored at the program and the other five are being posthumously inducted.

The new members are Mae Woods Bell, Harold Cooley, Daniel Finch, Richard T. Fountain, Alian Gurganus, George Higgs, James W. Hines, Warren R. Jones, Aldolphus Staton and Thomas Walker.

Fountain, Higgs, Jones, Staton and Walker are from Edgecombe County.

Edgecombe County native Fountain was born near Leggett and practiced law in Rocky Mount in the early part of the 20th century. He was elected five times to serve in the state House of Representatives. He also served as lieutenant governor of North Carolina.

He helped establish the East Carolina Training School for Boys in Rocky Mount in 1923, later named the Richard T. Fountain School and now known as Fountain Prison for Women.

From 1934-1942 he published the Rocky Mount Herald newspaper. He served on the board of various banks and community organizations before his death in 1945.

Trained as a carpenter, Higgs of Speed is better known for his music playing harmonica and guitar in a style recognized as Piedmont Blues.

 At 80 years old, Higgs has been performing most of his life and has toured throughout the United States and performed in Switzerland and Australia. Higgs has been honored with the NC Folklore Brown Hudson Award and the NC Folk Heritage Award from the NC Arts Council.

He has released two CDs and continues to perform across the state.

A lifelong resident of Edgecombe County, Warren Ray Jones was educated by  county schools and graduated from Conetoe in 1957. He spent six years in the U.S. Army before graduating from Shaw University and attending graduate school at N.C. A&T University.

He brought his training and talent home and coached in area schools. He coached basketball for 30 years and took his teams to six conference tournament championships and 14 consecutive years to the state playoffs. He was honored as Coach of the Year four times.

In addition to teaching and coaching, Jones also mentored many young men in the North Edgecombe Community until his death in 2008.

The son of a doctor, Staton first attended Virginia Military Institute for his advanced education. He then transferred to the U.S. Naval Academy where he graduated in 1902.

 In 1915 Staton was awarded the Medal of Honor for “gallantry and distinguished conduct in the battle of Vera Cruz in 1914. Just five years later he was awarded the Navy Cross for his bravery in battle in World War I. He later attended George Washington University Law School where he earned is LLB in 1917.

Before he retired in 1937 he had attained the rank of rear admiral. Staton died in 1964 and is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

Former Edgecombe County Commissioner, the Rev. Thomas L. Walker is an Edgecombe County native that was active in this region through his church, but also through his work with the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s.

He founded the Edgecombe Nash Political Caucus, authored "Brother to Brother – You Don’t Have to Die of Prostate Cancer," created Project Empower and recorded songs including "One Day at a Time" and "Keep Me in Your Will."

Bell was born in England, but has spent the past 60 years in Rocky Mount. She began the Children’s Museum which grew from a few exhibits to a major community program. She served as museum director for over 30 years. She has also published poetry and writes book reviews for the Rocky Mount Telegram. Bell has received the Daughters of American Revolution national Americanism Medal, the Silver Fawn Medal for distinguished service to Boy Scouts of America, NC Press Club Communicator of the Year in 1989, and the Southeastern Museums Distinguished Service Award in 1978.

Nash County native Cooley, served in the Navy in World War I, then attended Yale Law School.  He was elected to 12 terms in Congress representing the 4th District in North Carolina. While in Congress he chaired the agriculture committee, and later became a congressional advisor to the United Nations. The library in Nashville is named in his honor. Cooley died in 1974.

Finch of Bailey is recognized for his artistic talent and his many workshops to teach others about pottery and bluebirds. His work has been shown at museums and exhibitions throughout the southeast. He has served on the advisory board at the NC State Fair and for five years was president of the Village of Yesteryear at the State Fair.  In addition to his fine pottery work, he has also been recognized for his outstanding contributions to the nursery industry with the D.S. Copeland Award from the N.C. Association of Nurserymen.

Rocky Mount native Gurganus studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts before serving in the U.S. Navy. A graduate of Sarah Lawrence College, Gurganus published his first novel in 1989, "The Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All," which was on the New York Times bestseller list. That story was made into a TV movie and a Broadway play. He is recognized as a novelist and short story writer.  His other books include "White People," "Plays Well with Others" and "The Practical Heart," a collection of novellas.

Known as the “Ice King” in the early 20th century, Hines was a self made businessman. He began an ice business, Rocky Mount Fuel and Ice Co., to supply ice for trains to carry fresh produce from Florida to New York. He was also involved with the tobacco warehouses in the area. He eventually opened ice shops all across North Carolina. He used his success to build MacHaven a fine home in Rocky Mount. He served the Rocky Mount Chamber of Commerce and on the Board of Trustees of East Carolina Training School (now East Carolina University) and Atlantic Christian College (now Barton). Hines died in 1928.

Tickets to the annual banquet will go on sale in October from Twin County Board Members, at area Chamber of Commerce offices and at the Twin County Museum in the Rocky Mount Train Station that is open Fridays and Saturdays from 10 a.m. to 2  p.m and and from 2 to 4 p.m. Sundays.

 

Text Only
Local News
  • The first lap (with Relay story).jpg Edgecombe Relay for Life seeking business partners

    Fresh from raising $196,312 and ranking No. 4 nationally in per capita fundraising, Relay for Life Edgecombe County is seeking business and corporate sponsors to help in the fight against cancer.
    Corporate and business sponsorship packets, which detail the levels and benefits of sponsorship, are ready to be delivered, according to Jane Gurley Harper, corporate sponsor chair. Businesses can also help by forming a team to participate in Relay and raise money in that manner.

    February 9, 2012 1 Photo

  • Maggie Boyd.jpg Princeville commissioner, interim town manager involved in physical conflict


    PRINCEVILLE — The disconnect of water service at a commissioner's home led to a physical confrontation between the elected official and a town employee Wednesday at the town hall.
    According to Commissioner Gwen Knight, interim Town Manager Maggie Boyd gave instructions to a public works employee and a police officer to cut off Knight's water because the account was delinquent in the amount of $662.77.
    Knight said she went to the town hall to pay the bill as soon as she was told about her service being cut off.

    February 9, 2012 2 Photos

  • Victor Marrow new hedeshot.jpg Princeville terminates town manager Appoints museum curator to fill same position

    PRINCEVILLE — A contract dispute between the Princeville town manager and the town commissioners led to his termination at the close of business Monday.
    Victor Marrow was notified by Princevile Attorney Charles Watts that he had been fired.
    Marrow's contract expired Feb. 1, but the town extended it six days in hope of his signing a proposed new contract. Marrow was hired in February 2010 on a two-year contract. Nine months later, he resigned, only to rescind his resignation the following morning.
    Stipulations of the proposed new contract were untenable to Marrow and included the stipulation that it was to end on June 12, included a $5,000 pay cut, work in excess of 40 hours per week and write at least three grants per month, he said. 

    February 8, 2012 1 Photo

  • CRIME ROUNDUP

    The Tarboro Police Department responded to a call Friday and was told a victim had been stabbed. While conducting an investigation, officers were told by the victim that Perry Lee Bunn, 58, 304 Granville St., had stabbed him several times. The name of the victim was not released by police.
    Officers called EMS to respond to the scene to transport the victim to the hospital so he could treated for his injuries.

    February 8, 2012

  • Significant deficiencies in county audit

    Auditors told Edgecombe County Commissioners on Monday night that they found significant deficiencies while compiling the 2010-2011 annual audit of county finances. Still, the audit received an unqualified opinion.

    February 8, 2012

  • Teresa Bryant headshot.jpg Bryant declines to seek re-election

    Teresa DeLoatch Bryant announced she will not seek re-election to the District 2 seat she now holds on the Edgecombe County Public Schools Board. The announcement came 91 days before the May 8 Primary Election and nearly a year after the first-term plus one year board member announced her resignation for personal and career reasons. She later rescinded her decision.

    February 6, 2012 1 Photo

  • MimiHerman.jpg W.A. Patillo receives $5,000 poetry grant

    W.A. Pattillo School has been awarded $5,000 from the North Carolina Arts Council for Poetry in the Classroom with Mimi Herman.
    The funds will be used to provide a week of poetry writing experiences for seven fourth grade classes through the expertise and creativity of Herman. Students will gain self-confidence, and will view themselves as writers rather than merely consumers of literature. They will learn to use language effectively and creatively to communicate thoughts, feeling, and impressions.

    February 6, 2012 1 Photo

  • IMG_5889.JPG Pizza Bowl

    The biggest football game of the year brings the largest sale of the year for two area pizza restaurants.
    Tarboro branches of Pizza Inn and Dominos Pizza are gearing up for Super Bowl XLVI Sunday by increasing their regular employee lineup by as many as seven.
    Pizza Inn is running a special that they believe will keep them busy throughout the day. Last year they sold over 200 large pizzas on Super Bowl Sunday compared to 50 on an average Sunday.

    February 3, 2012 1 Photo

  • Edgecombe unemployment up in December

    TARBORO — Unemployment rates increased in 93 of North Carolina’s 100 counties in December. Rates decreased in four counties and remained the same in three.
    Edgecombe, which saw a slight improvement in November, fell back to its October 2011 level (15.7%). Of the 100 counties in North Carolina, Edgecombe and Dare are tied at third highest in unemployment. 

    February 3, 2012

  • Three ECPS campuses ahead of First Lady's nutritional guidelines

    When First Lady Michelle Obama and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack announced new guidelines for the nutritional overhaul of school meals last week, they could have chosen three of Edgecombe County's public schools as their models.

    February 2, 2012