|


German Moravians, a Protestant group, settled in the Piedmont in 1753 and established the town of Salem in 1766. As Salem prospered, the Moravian Church struggled to strike a balance between its acceptance of slavery and its concern for the spiritual welfare of the enslaved population. For generations to come, this moral dilemma shaped the freedom of African Americans to congregate and educate themselves. It also formed the culture which would sustain those rights.
The
seeds of self-determination were
sown in 1822 at the foundation of
the African Moravian church known
as St. Philips. Worshippers received
limited freedom in exchange for obedience.
Literacy was introduced at the Sunday
school established by the Salem
Female Missionary Society
in 1827 and attracted hundreds of
black "scholars" until
1831 when state law prohibited the
teaching of literacy to slaves.
By 1849, Winston had been established as
the Forsyth County seat. Years of growth fueled by the tobacco, furniture
and textile industries followed the railroad linking Salem and Winston.
Yet increasingly rigid codes of segregation threatened the delicate
framework of opportunity erected by missionary efforts in the previous
decades. The African American church movement was forced underground,
while self-styled preachers traveled the countryside, bringing news
to the slaves and inspiring faith in the land where it had taken root.

The church emerged from the Civil War at the center of African American cultural life, reuniting the spiritual welfare of the community and individual achievement. According to a census report of 1890, most blacks carved out a living in mills or factories. Some were tenant farmers, but many others plied a trade such as carpentry or masonry. A fortunate few had edged into proprietorship by catering to their neighbors. It was these craftsmen and entrepreneurs who galvanized the traditional ministry of hope into a bulwark of cooperative economic and social enterprise.
Between 1870 and 1900, African American
congregational life in Winston and Salem
enjoyed phenomenal membership growth, culminating
in building campaigns and an effective
role in policy-making as the "Twin City" government
began to coalesce. In 1881, Israel Clement
was the first of eight African Americans
elected to the Winston Town Commission. In
1883, Winston organized its first
school board, and the decision was made to
create two public school systems. Foreshadowing
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), funding the separate
projects proved equally challenging for both
blacks and whites. Depot Street School, the
first public school for blacks, finally opened
in 1887 thanks to donations from philanthropists
as far away as Boston.
Although
Simon Green Atkins was not the first principal
of Depot Street School, during his tenure
(1890-1895) he impressed upon the emerging
African American community its responsibility
to "add to
the moral and intellectual power of the
race." He
conceived institutions of higher learning
that would support this goal. He founded
Slater Industrial Academy in 1892 and Columbian
Heights Graded School in 1905. Atkins High
School, the city's first high school for
blacks was named for him in 1931, and
today Winston-Salem
State University, the ultimate legacy of the Slater project, enrolls
more than 3,500 students.
Atkins received an honorary doctorate from
Howard University in 1928, recognizing him
as a "responsible
and trusted citizen" not only because of
his vision as an administrator but his stake
in the solvency of the community. Atkins
was also a president and a founder
of Twin City Building and
Loan Association, one of two
black-owned savings and loans. The other,
Peoples Building and Loan Association,
was established by J.S. Hill.

Hill had come to Winston-Salem for an
education. In turn, he became a teacher
and participated enthusiastically in the fundraising campaign to endow
Slater Industrial and Normal
School. This experience had lasting importance;
for Hill and another Slater Industrial Academy graduate, Charles Jones,
who, along with
Francis Kennedy, founded the city's first
black-owned bank, Forsyth Savings and Trust Co., in 1907.
William Samuel Scales, who became president
of the Forsyth Savings and Trust in 1923,
exemplified the entrepreneurial spirit of his era. Though he had little
formal education and labored
in the R.J. Reynolds factory on Third Street,
as did most blacks, Scales had a flair for entertaining. With his earnings
and the help of his
family, he opened one café across from the factory and another
across town on East 14th Street. The popularity
and profitability of both businesses afforded him the opportunity to
venture into night club
ownership and bonding. He purchased the Lincoln,
Lafayette and Rex Theatres, which showcased popular bands, plays and
vaudeville acts.
In 1906, Winston Industrial Association, founded by R.W. Brown et al., issued its first policy to Susan Ann Snyder and within a few years offered coverage to African Americans throughout the state. By 1915, the company had merged with Mountain City Mutual Life in Asheville. The name Winston Mutual Life Insurance Co. was adopted in 1939, but headquarters did not return to Winston-Salem until 1969. The agency remained at its East Fifth Street location until its merger with Golden State Mutual Life in the mid-1980s.
L.C. Kerns organized the Colored Merchants
Association (CMA), which was a vehicle for
collective bargaining during the 1920s and
1930s. The CMA provided assistance and advice during the
depression, which allowed many family-owned
businesses to flourish, and assured jobs
and fair prices in the community. Kerns, himself a
grocer and real estate broker, continued
informally to advise small businesses until
his retirement in 1958. Likewise, Velma Hopkins devoted
a lifetime to grassroots organizations. Her
career as a union organizer and civil rights
activist culminated in 1947, when workers, mostly black,
went on strike at the Reynolds factory for
a record 38 days.
Victory Credit Union was organized by the black clergy and business leaders of East Winston in 1946 to assist low to moderate income earners with loans and savings incentives. In 1984, Victory Credit merged with the Employees Credit Union of Winston Mutual Life, becoming Victory Masonic Mutual Credit Union. It is one of the oldest, black-owned businesses in Winston-Salem today.

In 1912, Winston passed an ordinance prohibiting blacks from living on the same street as whites. Blacks formed neighborhoods in proximity to their work. The oldest areas, Happy Hill, Salem and Belview, were often identified on city maps. Within the black community, however, more boundaries were defined by the shared values or relative prosperity of the residents.
Professionals connected to Winston-Salem
Teachers College settled Columbian Heights, considered to be the first
planned community. The Patterson Avenue area, known in the early years
as Depot Street, was a business center, as well as a catalyst for the
establishment and growth of the oldest churches. The Pond so
named after the city's reservoir collapsed in 1904 was home to
small business owners and factory workers. Rag Shakes and Reynoldstown,
inhabited by domestic and factory workers, were some of the most densely
populated areas.
It
is said that Mrs. Jessie Hayes brought
the bus to Winston-Salem. She sent a fellow named Pete Sadler to Detroit
with the money to buy one
and drive it home. Though it's not said
what she did with the bus once she had her hands on the wheel, it seems
likely that she offered women
working as domestics on the other side
of town something they'd prayed for a lift.
So was born the network of jitney drivers
who made public transportation for African Americans
a reality. By the mid-1920s, demand for expansion
of service was so great that C.T. Woodland,
a civic leader of East Winston, organized a meeting
of the jitney drivers to discuss incorporation.
Exactly one month later in May 1926, the Safe
Bus Company secured its charter from the state.
Women continued, however, to shape the company's
fortunes. Mary Miller Burns, daughter of founder
Elijah Miller, became the first woman president
in 1959 and was succeeded in 1960 by Delphine Morgan,
widow of founder, Ralph Morgan. By 1968,
the company boasted several hundred employees and
claimed title to being "the
largest black-owned transportation concern in the
world."
Photos courtesy of Forsyth County Public Library Photography Collection
|