Friday, March 29, 2024

North Carolina School Construction Projects: 1949

North Carolina School Construction Projects: 1949 (including a cannery)


In the late 1940s North Carolina faced an "acute deficiency" in its public school buildings. To address this problem the Federal Works Agency in 1949 completed architectural plans for 115 school building projects in 86 North Carolina communities. The projects, either new buildings or additions to present structures, would cost an estimated $15.4 million. Here are the Caswell County projects:

Yanceyville school building addition: $57,870 [school not identified]
Prospect Hill school building addition: $112,095
Providence school building addition: $48,800
Solomon Lea school building addition: $67,462
Anderson school building addition: $87,829

Archibald Murphey gymnasium-vocational building: $102,419
Bartlett Yancey School gymnasium-vocational building and cannery: $198,525
Caswell County school bus garage: $21,500
Cherry Grove School building addition: $65,270
Cobb Memorial School building addition: $135,693

In addition to these federally funded projects the North Carolina General Assembly was considering an additional $30 million to $50 million for school construction projects.

The News and Observer (Raleigh, NC), 4 February 1949.

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Photograph: Bartlett Yancey Elementary School (foreground), Bartlett Yancey High School (background). Image is not associated with the above newspaper article as both buildings were completed well before 1949.

Thursday, March 28, 2024

Caswell County Board of Education Election 1949

 School Politics Hot: School Spanking: William Claire Taylor Rejected


History teaches administration of Caswell County schools frequently has been politically charged. The Superintendent position often has been precarious. Some lasted only weeks, while others had a long tenure in office. Some resigned. Others were fired. The year 1949 saw intense political confrontation. At issue was School Superintendent Holland McSwain (1903-1988).

For some reasons, not all of which are clear, certain factions in the county took a strong dislike to McSwain, who had been in the position since 1935 and generally was well liked and respected. The battle lines apparantly were somewhat geographic, with the Semora group leading the anti-McSwain charge, and the Yanceyville group among the staunchest McSwain supporters.

As constituted, the three-member Board of Education (which hired the superintendent) would not remove McSwain. So Caswell County's representative to the NC Legislature, William Claire Taylor, "packed" the Board. He had passed legislation expanding the Board to five members, with the extra two specified in his bill. With the additional members, the Board voted 3:2 to remove McSwain.

However, one Taylor-picked Board member (Julius Spencer Watlington) then resigned amid the furor, and the Legislature stepped in requiring a special Board of Education election. This was held in May 1949. While races in some districts were close, those in support of McSwain prevailed in all districts and his contract was extended for two years (until June 30, 1951).

Thus, McSwain spanked Taylor.

Photograph: Holland McSwain

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The next year, 1950, Holland McSwain announced his resignation as superintendent of Caswell County schools to accept a position as public relations and business manager of Flora MacDonald College in Reg Springs, N.C. He left with head held high after defeating the somewhat devious actions by William Claire Taylor.

Monday, March 25, 2024

Yanceyville Kiwanis Club: 1948

Yanceyville Kiwanis Club

In November 1948, the Yanceyville Kiwanis Club was formally launched. Ralph Aldridge was president and other officers included John S. Dailey, vice president, Fred L. Stuck, secretary-treasurer, and J. C. Alexander, J. Bradley Cook, Ralph W. Holmes, V. Frazier Williams, John A. Woods, James W. White, and Edward H. Wilson, directors.
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Some of the principals who took part in the charter night festivities of the newly formed Yanceyville Kiwanis Club Monday in the Yanceyville High School are shown here (left to right):

1. Ralph Mims Aldridge, President of the Yanceyville Club;

2. John Slade Dailey, Vice President of the Yanceyville Club; and

3. Fred Lee Stuck, Secretary-Treasurer of the Yanceyville Club;

Remaing men in photograph are Kiwanis International officials from various parts of North Carolina. Click image to see a larger version.

Durham Morning Herald (Durham, NC), Wednesday, 24 November 1948.
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Additional Sources

Burton, W. C., "Kiwanis Club Is Chartered: Yanceyville Group Holds Initial Meeting." Greensboro Daily News (Greensboro, NC), Tuesday, 23 November 1948, Page 24.

When the Past Refused to Die: A History of Caswell County North Carolina 1777-1977, William S. Powell (1977) at 427.
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Sunday, March 24, 2024

"Bellfield" in Yanceyville, Caswell County, NC

"Bellfield"

The following story of Bellfield and friends Bell Siah and Andy Ferguson apparently is found in a letter from George Andrew Anderson (1869-1945) to his son James Ezekiel (Zeke) Anderson (1914-2005). Presumably this letter remains in the files of the Anderson family or was donated to the Caswell County Historical Association (CCHA), an organization in which Zeke Anderson and wife Sallie Gibbs Pridgen Anderson (1915-2012) were deeply involved (being founding members). The research library at the CCHA's Richmond-Miles Museum is named for Sallie Anderson.

Here is the story as published in 1948:


"Behind the [Caswell County] courthouse lies what is still called Bellfield, where more than 150 years ago [before 1798] Bell Siah and Andy Ferguson, two Irishmen from the old country, used to sit beneath a great sassafras tree or fish along the branch.

"There were never better friends than these. One day as they sat beneath the tree, which according to a letter written by George Anderson to his son Zeke Anderson, had a trunk 'like the torso of a human body, while outstretched limbs were human in their resemblance,' Bell must have told his friend that he was going to fashion a coffin for himself out of the tree. This he did, using axe and adze to hollow it out, and sweet gum and bee's wax to polish the surface; then he stored in the loft of his cabin.

[Photograph: Looking south behind the Courthouse toward Country Line Creek. Image not associated with the above newspaper article. Click image to see a larger version. Courtesy Tim Ross.]

"When the time neared for the coffin to be put to its intended use, Andy was there; and he listened to his dying friend say: 'I feel that my calling and election is sure, and I can smell the shamrock and the hawthorn blooming in the fields of Old Ireland.'

Tuesday, March 19, 2024

Confederate Dollar Scale of Depreciation, North Carolina: 1865

Confederate Money

Jokes are made about the value of Confederate currency/notes, which in many respects became worthless when the Civil War ended. I own many of these notes, some of which are of interest to numismatists.
However, what about contracts entered into during the Civil War based upon Confederate money? How were these contracts to be resolved? A scale of depreciation was adopted. Was the NC legislature being generous in only depreciating the Confederate dollar to 100 (100 Confederate dollars required to buy one gold dollar) in April 1865? Was this bill the final depreciation scale adopted? What about other Confederate states?

Confederate Dollar Scale of Depreciation: 1865

A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT TO ESTABLISH A SCALE OF DEPRECIATION OF CONFEDERATE CURRENCY.

WHEREAS, By an ordinance of the Convention, entitled "An Ordinance declaring what laws and ordinances are in force, and for other purposes," ratified on the 18th day of October, A. D., 1865, it is made the duty of the General Assembly to provide a scale of depreciation of the Confederate Currency from the time of its first issue to the end of the war, and it is further therein declared that "all executory contracts, solvable in money, whether under seal or not, made after the depreciation of said currency before the 1st of May, 1865, and unfilled (except official bonds and penal bonds payable to the State) shall be deemed to have been made with the understanding that they were solvable in money of the said currency," subject, nevertheless, to evidence of different intent of the parties to the contract [parol evidence]; therefore,

Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the State of North Carolina, and it is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That the following scale of depreciation be and the same is hereby adopted and established as the measure of value of one gold dollar in Confederate currency, for each month, and the fractional parts of the month of December, 1864, from the 1st day of November, 1861, to the 1st day of May, 1865, to wit:


AND, WHEREAS, many grave and difficult disputes may arise between executors, administrators, guardians and trustees, and their legatees, distributees, wards and cestuysque trust, in the settlement of their accounts and trust, arising from the depreciation of Confederate currency, State Treasury notes and Bank notes, incident to and growing out of the late war; and that law suits and expensive litigation may be obviated;

Be it further enacted, That in all such cases the parties are hereby empowered to form a full and perfect statement of the case on both sides, which case shall be committed to the determination of one of the Judges of the Superior Courts, chosen by the parties, who is hereby authorized to consider and determine the same, according to equity and good conscience: Provided, however, That no part of this section shall be construed to estop or hinder any person from proceeding in the usual course of law, if he shall deem the same necessary.

A true copy.

J. A. ENGELHARD,

Clerk of Senate.

See: Branson

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The Confederate Note Case, 86 U.S. 548 (1873): Appeal from the Circuit Court for the District of North Carolina: Confederate Note Case

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60% From Printing Money

There are three sources of government revenue: taxation, borrowing, and printing money. Given that the Confederate States of America was established on the principle of states’ rights, many Southerners were suspicious of granting the central government powers to impose and collect taxes. With opposition from the general public as well as leading political figures, it is not surprising the Confederate government collected approximately only 8.2% of its total revenues from taxes. Tariffs, another potential source of tax revenue, were hampered by the Union blockade of Southern ports.

The Confederacy then turned to debt issue as a means of war finance. The South successfully sold some long-term government securities during the early stages of the war. Bond issues proved a limited source of war financing as Southern prospects diminished, however. Investors increasingly shied away from purchasing securities offered by a government with little or no tax base and a deteriorating military situation.

The government resorted to money financing as its primary source of revenue. Overall, debt issue and the printing press accounted for nearly 32 and 60 percent of the South’s total real revenues during the war.

Source: Confederate Finance and Money

Caswell County Board of Education: 1911

 Caswell County Board of Education: 1911

Yanceyville, April 6 [1911] -- "The county board of education was in session Monday, Messrs. C. H. King, chairman, T. J. Hatchett and R. I Newman being in attendance. A large amount of routine business was transacted and settlement was made with the county treasurer. Superintendent Anderson submitted a report on the general condition of the school work. The report indicates that the session just closed was the most satisfactory one in years."

The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, North Carolina), 7 April 1911, Friday, Page 1.

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C. H. King is Cary Howard King (1864-1959).

T. J. Hatchett most likely is Thomas Jackson Hatchett (1866-1932).

R. I. Newman most likely is Robert Ira Newman (1854-1934).

Superintendent Anderson is George Andrew Anderson (1869-1945).

It appears the Caswell County Board of Education was created in 1885 with George Nicholas Thompson (1832-1891) serving as the first superintendent:

"In June, 1885, W. W. Taylor, Henry F. Brandon, and Gabriel L. Walker were elected to the Board of Education for Caswell County and in July they met and organized. George N. Thompson was Superintendent of Public Instruction and he acted as clerk of the board. In the fall the board appointed three committmen for each of the school districts and the following year it was reported that the number of schools for both races had been increased. There were 35 for whites and 37 for blacks. An additional school district had recently been created bringing the total number to 37. The average salary for white teachers was less than $27.00 a month and for black teachers it was about $24.00."

Source: Powell, William S. When the Past Refused to Die: A History of Caswell County North Carolina 1777-1977. Durham (North Carolina): Moore Publishing Company, 1977, pp. 383-388. 

Caswell County Board of Health: 1911

Caswell County Board of Health: 1911

Yanceyville, April 6 [1911] -- "The county board of health, as created by the last General Assembly, met in the office of the superintendent of schools Monday. The board is composed of the following gentlemen: J. S. Harvey, chairman; Geo. A. Anderson, secretary, and B. S. Graves. In compliance of the law, Dr. J. A. Pinnix, of Anderson township, and Dr. J. F. Badgett, of Locust Hill township, were elected as additional members. The board will meet again on the second Monday in May at which time the county superintendent of health will be elected."

The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, North Carolina), 7 April 1911, Friday, Page 1.

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This is the first mention found of the Caswell County Board of Health. The newly created group selected as the County Superintendent of Health Dr. Stephen Arnold Malloy, M.D. (1872-1944).

J. S. Harvey most likely is John Shields Harvey (1864-1935). In 1911 he apparently was living in Pelham Township, Caswell County, NC.

Geo. A. Anderson is George Andrew Anderson (1869-1945).

B. S. Graves is Barzillai Shuford Graves (1854-1942).

Dr. J. A. Pinnix is Dr. John Alexander Pinnix, M.D. (1846-1931).

Dr. J. F. Badgett is Dr. James Farish Badgett, M.D. (1855-1933).

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Photograph: Undated image of the Caswell County Health Department building. Caswell Knitting Mills Inc. is in the background. According to Bill Powell's History of Caswell County, in 1970 a "new" Health Department Building was built.

Locust Hill Post Office Closed: 1911

 Locust Hill Post Office Closed: 1911

The News of Caswell: Our Yanceyville Scribe Has Store of New Items

"The office at Locust Hill, which has been maintained as a postoffice for many years, has been discontinued by the Department, and the patrons in the future will be supplied by the R.F.D. from Yanceyville."

The Reidsville Review (Reidsville, North Carolina), 7 April 1911, Friday, Page 1.

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The Locust Hill US Post Office began as Brown's Store in 1804, apparently operating in the store of Jethro Brown (1766-1828) [built by his father John Edmunds Brown (1733-1798)]. The first postmaster was John H. Brown, possibly a son of John Edmunds Brown. Jethro Brown became postmaster in 1818. While the name changed in 1846, query whether the location did. The first postmaster under the Locust Hill name was Stephen Neal. The last postmaster was William W. Hatchett (1859-1939).

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Brown's Store







Locust Hill Post Office Cancellation August 7, 1885


Sunday, March 17, 2024

John W. Stephens Slain by Men of His Own Political Party and Not by Ku Klux

Says J. W. Stephens Not A Carpetbagger: Geo. F. Ivey Says Man Assassinated in Yanceyville Probably Was Slain by Men of His Own Political Party and Not by Ku Klux

(Special to The Charlotte Observer) Hickory, Oct. 12 [1935] -- J. W. Stephens, whose assassination in Yanceyville during the reconstruction days led to a declaration of martial law and indirectly to the impeachment of Governor W. W. Holden, was not a carpetbagger and there is evidence he was slain by men of his own political party instead of Ku Klux Klansmen, according to George F. Ivey, well-known Hickory manufacturer.

Mr. Ivey, a brother of J. B. Ivey of Charlotte, says he has information tending to prove that the "inside story" of the Stephens assassination, reported in a recent press dispatch from Danville, Va., is incorrect. The news story told of a deposition which Capt. John G. Lea of Danville made in 1919 and locked in a vault until it was disclosed after his death.

In his witnessed statement, Captain Lea, who was on organizer for the Invisible Empire in Caswell County in 1870 and who died several days ago at South Boston, Va., names Col. J. T. Mitchell and Thomas Oliver, now both dead, as the actual executioners of Stephens. The Lea statement, witnessed and attested by the late Col. Fred Olds, declares Stephens was condemned to die by the Caswell Klan which accused him of arson. The Klansmen swore never to reveal to others who participated in the enterprise until the last one was dead. Captain Lea was the last, according to the Danville story, succumbing at South Boston, Va., in his 92nd year. He did, however, make the deposition in 1919 at the urgent request of the North Carolina Historical Commission and locked in a vault.

Mr. Ivey, who formerly lived in Caswell County, is familiar with the circumstances of the Stephens death, or at least with the local stories there. The courthouse where the man was killed during a political rally is still standing and visitors are shown the very room in which the body was found. Continuing, Mr. Ivey declared:

No Carpetbagger

"J. W. Stephens was not a carpetbagger. A carpetbagger was a corrupt man from the North who came to the South at the end of the war with all his possessions in a carpet bag -- a valise made of carpet instead of leather. Stephens was a native of Rockingham County and was for many years known as 'Chicken Stephens' by reason of his being convicted of stealing chickens from Thomas Ratliffe of Wentworth. He left his watch and pistol to secure his fine, went to Caswell County and was duly elected a member of the Legislature, which was composed almost entirely of negroes and men of Stephens's stamp.

"It seems that at that time the election in North Carolina was held three months before the general election, and Governor Holden and his crowd were exceedingly anxious for the State to go Republican for its effect on the other Southern States. As the election drew near -- remember, it was in July -- the State seemed to be peaceful and there was no excuse for sending Federal troops to guard the polls. According to the story, believed for many years, Stephens was assassinated by his own party in order to have an excuse for drastic action. It was not intended to kill him, but when he recognized his assailants, his death became necessary.

Holden Told Bailey?

"Several years after this, Rev. C. T. Bailey, a Baptist minister, who was the father of the present North Carolina Senator, Josiah W. Bailey, and at that time editor of The Biblical Recorder, stated that Governor Holden, while in a penitent mood, told him that the Republican party had much to do with the crime and that the prosecution was discontinued because there was evidence which would incriminate influential members of that party. A public statement to this effect was published by Rev. Mr. Bailey early in October, 1876.

"It is said that history is never correctly written until long after the events have taken place, in this case, even after 65 years, it is not at all certain who killed Stephens. The statements of a man in contemplation of death (such as that of Captain Lea) will usually receive much weight, but there was no opprobrium attached to the deed in question and thousands of good men thought his death was well deserved. We must remember that the war had been ended only a few years and thousands of men had been killed legally. Much bragging was done about the exploits during the war, and a little about this matter would not seem out of place."

Major Lee Latta expressed the opinion that the minister referred to was Doctor Skinner, pastor of the Raleigh Baptist church, who reported the confession of Holden and that Doctor Skinner was severely criticised for revealing matters told him in confidence by one of his members. Mr. Ivey said it is, of course, possible that Holden told substantially the same story to both Doctor Skinner and Rev. Mr. Bailey.

The Charlotte Observer (Charlotte, North Carolina), 13 October 1935, Sunday, Page 31.

Thursday, March 14, 2024

"From Days of Reconstruction: Story of the Arrest and Prosecution of a North Carolina Sheriff in Trying Days" by Captain Ball 1910

 "From Days of Reconstruction: Story of the Arrest and Prosecution of a North Carolina Sheriff in Trying Days" by Captain Ball

"I am here enjoying the fine air and scenery of a most beautiful country. Keuka Lake is a gem among the smaller lakes of New York State. Wild Indian tribes formerly had uncontrolled possession and one can look out upon this charming lake and almost can hear their war-whoops and in imagination can see the canoes of the dusky warriors darting across its pellucid waters.

"All fighting men have some sort of a battle-cry. I do not think the war-whoop would disturb me very much, for I have often heard the rebel yell, which, although disagreeable, was not wholly effacing.

"I lived for twenty-five years among the people who had uttered it and found them with hatreds and affectations like other people. While living there, many things worth of notice and remembrance passed under my observation. I now recall the trial of a North Carolina sheriff by a military commission in Charleston.

"I was employed in the years 1867-8 in the services of the Second Military district, comprising the Carolinas, as assistant judge advocate of the district, under General Ed. R. S. Canby. I have never seen General Sickles but once and I am sure he never heard of me. So the silly story that I was his private secretary was a pure invention. (The insufferable meanness of stating as the truth what is not known to be true, for a supposed political benefit, is inconceivable to honest minds.) It would have been no disgrace, however, to have been private secretary to General Sickles, many of whose General orders have been retained in the statutes of North Carolina.

Sunday, March 10, 2024

Bank of Yanceyville Vault Air Conditioned: The Daily Times-News (Burlington, North Carolina), 25 Oct 1938

 Bank of Yanceyville Vault Air Conditioned: 1938!


There are a number of interesting things about the bank that Sam Bason built at Yanceyville in Caswell County . . . not the least of which is no doubt a seasonal banking policy . . . and at this time of the year the hourly schedule is no more than lettering on the windows a.m. to 3 p.m.

It is 'bacco time in Caswell . . . and growers home from widely scattered markets in North Carolina and Virginia want to stop by on their way home and make a deposit or visit the strong box in the vault . . . and a community like Yanceyville is one in which business is on a community plan, accommodating.

"Its just impossible for us to close when our patrons want to see us," Mr. Bason said. "Of course, it is quite different in the summer when the farmers are in the fields and only the town folk have their banking to attend to. The schedule [on the window] is then maintained."

]Photograph: Samuel Murphey Bason's Yanceyville Rotary Club photograph. It is not associated with this newspaper article.]


Back in 1921 when the bank was built, it was regarded as the best appointed of any bank in a town the size of Yanceyville . . . and even today some of the appointments are more modern than may be found in large city banks. its resources are about $500,000, falling down a bit during summer when it becomes necessary for some to "borrow" from savings to make crops, take care of farm and household necessities and so on.

"It looks like a fine spot for a holdup," a visitor remarked to Mr. Bason.

"Not so good," he answered. "You see, there isn't much money in sight on the counters at any time. Here is what we do with it. Put it through this slot . . . like posting a letter at the post office . . . and it will be fifteen minutes later before we can get a dollar of it.

"We figure that while the bank robber would be waiting for the lock to open, persons would enter the bank and he would be foiled . . . probably walking out and disappearing."

[Photograph: Bank of Yanceyville under construction. Image not associated with this newspaper article.]


The most valuable piece of equipment, however, is an electric ventilating system within the big vault, an emergency air conditioner "just in case."

"Sometimes," Mr. Bason continued, "a bank robber will force members of the office staff into a vault and slam the door in his face. That's bad! Experts say that a man might live in our vault without fresh air for a period of two hours . . . and if two persons were confined the life span would be cut in half. Imagine that!

"But you press this little button here and old air is forced out and new air forced in. It means that such a victim could live without discomfort almost indefinitely, certainly until rescued from the tomb."

[Photograph shows vault in background; not associated with this newspaper article.]

Sam Bason is a product of Alamance County, where he was reared on the Haw River . . . going to Caswell some twenty years ago to become an outstanding citizen of Yanceyville and the surrounding community. He has become thoroughly "acclimated" and wouldn't trade his business address nor his domicile for a swanky front on Park Row.

Now he has become a member of the highway commission from the fifth district . . . and that means laying plenty of bumpy roads and proposed trails on his office desk. It brings visitors by the individual, group and delegation, with a little petty change left on the counter at the drug store and sometimes at the grocers.

He's a genial fellow. He'll talk about the history of Caswell, the rural background, and the coming first industry . . . a hosiery mill . . . and he'll discuss national affairs in business and politics. And before you go, he'll say "Wait just a moment, I want to give you one of the latest road maps. It is a dandy.!"

"I'll say it is," remarked a visitor in his office yesterday. "It's the third one you've given me!"

The Daily Times-News (Burlington, North Carolina), 25 Oct 1938, Tue, Page 4.

Sunday, March 03, 2024

Brothers W. B. Horton and W. P. Horton in NC Senate

 Brothers in NC Senate: W. B. Horton and W. P. Horton

The News and Observer (Raleigh, North Carolina), 9 Jan 1927

"Rather an unusual circumstance is that two of the members of the [North Carolina] State Senate are brothers. They are W. B. [William Banks] Horton, of Yanceyville, and W. P. [Wilkins Perryman] Horton, of Pittsboro. . . . 

The following is excerpted from the Chatham Record:

"Thomas Horton brought his wife and children to Chatham from Kansas City, when W. P. was a tot. Both the father and mother of the Senators are Virginians. But the wanderlust carried the father to Texas and later to Kansas City, where he was a merchant, till one Christmas he happened to visit his sister in this county [Chatham County, NC], Mrs. Pete Carter, and found the climate so much to his liking as compared to that of Kansas City, where the snow was then half-leg deep, that he straighway moved his family to Chatham and became a farmer, being located seven or eight miles from Chapel Hill.


"Here the boys grew up. When W. B., was a youth of seventeen or eighteen the wanderlust seized him and he ran away and joined the navy, in which he served 24 years. While Josephus Daniels was secretary of the navy in the first Wilson administration, it will be recalled, he opened examinations for midshipmen to the enlisted men, thus giving them an opportunity to secure rank along with the graduates of Annapolis. W. B. Horton, then having served for nearly a score of years, was fortunate enough to rise from the ranks and thus served as an officer during the World War.

"The war over, he resigned, studied law at the University and at Wake Forest, and began to practice at Yanceyville. He has already served a term in the house of representatives and now goes to the senate, thus rapidly rising in civil affairs after giving 24 years to the navy.




"W. P. can barely remember living in Kansas city and consequently feels himself a native Chathamite. He has already once ably represented his county in the senate [North Carolina Senate]."