Robert Lee Vann Marker Dedicated in Ahoskie

For the third time in six months, a North Carolina Highway Historical Marker nominated by the Chowan Discovery Group (CDG) was unveiled.  This time, one of the most accomplished natives of Hertford County was honored.  Robert Lee Vann, the publisher, lawyer, businessman and civil rights leader of national reputation, was dedicated on April 20, Friday at 11am and it stands at the intersection of Ahoskie’s Academy Street and First Street.

The other two CDG-nominated markers are for the ancient town of Choanoac (Chowanoke) outside of Harrellsville; and for the solder, legislator and inventor, Parker David Robbins, located in Magnolia, North Carolina.

Robert Lee Vann was born just outside of Ahoskie in 1879. He first attended New Ahoskie Baptist Church and Ahoskie Colored School before moving with his mother to Harrellsville.  His work in the post office there allowed him to save money to attend Waters Training School in Winton (now C.S. Brown High School).

By 1910, Vann had earned undergraduate and law degrees from what is now the University of Pittsburgh.  Vann, using his experience as editor of his college newspaper, took control of the young Pittsburgh Courier newspaper.  Twenty-five years later, the Courier was nationally distributed with a circulation of a quarter of a million copies.   It was a leading voice calling for equal rights for all Americans.  The Pittsburgh Courier is 112 years old.

Robert L. Vann supported Waters Training School and published articles contributed by Dr. Calvin Scott Brown.  In the administration of Franklin D. Roosevelt, Vann was appointed to serve Assistant to the Attorney General in the Department of Justice.  Robert Lee Vann died in 1940.

Students from Hertford County High School attended the dedication.  The Robert L. Vann Alumni association hosted a reception afterwards at the R.L. Vann School.

The Chowan Discovery Group organized the dedication with the help of CDG Advisor Dennis Deloatch, Immediate Past President of the Robert L. Vann School Alumni Association.  The event was also supported by Representative Annie W. Mobley, District 5 – NC General Assembly; the Robert L. Vann School Alumni Association, the C.S. Brown School Alumni Association, Roanoke-Chowan Community College, the Town of Ahoskie and Hertford County Public Schools.

Roanoke-Chowan News-Herald Article | Video of unveiling

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Parker David Robbins Art Contest and Gallery – Prizes awarded.

Students of 3 Duplin County schools recently

Entry by Christian Smith, an 8th grader at the Charity Elementary School.

participated in an art contest honoring the life of Magnolia resident Parker David Robbins.  The contest coincided with the new North Carolina Highway Historical Marker in Magnolia that recognizes the accomplishments of Robbins.

Parker David Robbins (1834 – 1917) was a sawmill owner, inventor, state legislator, farmers, steamboat builder and operator, house builder and one of the highest ranking officers in the United States Colored Troops during the Civil War.  Much of the artwork depicts Robbins’ various roles.

The contest was sponsored by the Duplin County Public Schools and the Dr. Martin Luther King Birthday Commemoration Committee.  The judging was conducted by the Chowan Discovery Group who nominated the Robbins highway marker.  Two of the judges are art professionals and all three judges are relatives of Robbins.  One of the judges, Paula Sanderlin Dorosti, contributed $300 is prize money to the winners!

The winners of the contest are:

Art contest judges Mahmood Dorosti and Paula Sanderlin Dorosti reviews the art of Duplin County students.

Beulaville Elementary School, 6th Grade: Brittni Osbourne – 1st place; Ciarra Kennedy– 2nd place; Mariah King – 3rd place; Sabrina Sanchez – Honorable Mention

Beulaville Elementary School, 7th Grade: Logan Smith – 1st place; Tyquesha Whitehead – 2nd;  Hayley Wadleigh – 3rd place

Beulaville Elementary School, 8th Grade: Desiree Judge – 1st place; Brode Spell – 2nd place; Noah Winberry – 3rd place; Samantha Welton – Honorable mention

Charity Elementary School, 7th Grade: Jalene Ford

Charity Elementary School , 8th Grade: Ethan Carlson – 1st place, Christian Smith –  2nd place and Edwin Alvarenga, 3rd place

North Duplin Jr. Sr. High School, 8th Grade: Casey Whitfield

Click here to view the students art from:
Beulaville Elementary School | Charity Elementary School | North Duplin Jr. Sr. High School

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Winton Triangle’s Parker David Robbins Honored with Marker

RobbinsMarkerCDG12002_222

Civil War re-enactors from Wilmington pose with the just unveiled marker In Magnolia, NC. Robbins' home and grave are nearby.

Intrepid, ground-breakers like Parker David Robbins brought forth a world that Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. took and carried further.  Yesterday, the gains made by Dr. King, and those like him, paid back the favor because Robbins and Dr. King shared a glorious celebration in Duplin County, North Carolina.

The county’s annual King Day Celebration brought together the broad spectrum of residents to honor both men as well as present and future leaders.  It was a day of color guards, anthems, prayers, speeches about justice and ascension, history lessons, four US Colored Troop re-enactors, four Confederate women re-enactors (one of whom is a Robbins descendant!),  fifty-some drawings of Robbins’ life by Duplin County elementary students, awards for students and educators, musical performances, large audiences, a motorcade from Kenansville to Magnolia and finally, the unveiling of the North Carolina Highway Historical Marker for the multi-talented and accomplished Robbins.  Robbins, born in the Choanoac Indian community of Gates County, made his rise in Bertie County, in battlefields running from Suffolk to Richmond, in Raleigh, in Hertford County and finally, in Duplin County where he spent most of his adult life and is buried.

The Chowan Discovery Group, nominator of the marker, has many people to thank – too many to note here.  Yet, special thank yous go to Delilah Gomes, coordinator of the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Commemoration Committee and the Committee itself, the Duplin County Historical Association, the North Carolina Office of Archives and History, Fred Johnson, Sr. – Sergeant of the Battery B, 2nd U.S. Colored Light Artillery re-enactors, and Earl Ijames of the North Carolina History Museum.   View the photography gallery and the video from News14 Carolina.

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Historical Maker for Parker D. Robbins set for Jan. 16

Courtesy of Gary Robbins

The second of three highway historical markers nominated by the Chowan Discovery Group will be unveiled on January 16, 2012 at noon in Magnolia, NC.   The upcoming dedication program for the Parker David Robbins marker will begin at 9:30am at the Duplin County Events Center in Kenansville.  The program is sponsored by the Dr. Martin Luther King Commemoration Committee.

Robbins (1834 – 1917) was one of the most accomplished figures of the Winton Triangle Community.  He was born in the last years of Gates County’s Choanoac (Chowanoke) Indian community. His family moved to Colerain in Bertie County.  By the end of the Civil War, he had been a farmer, landowner, mechanic and Sgt.-Major of the 2nd Regiment, Cavalry, United States Colored Troops.  His regiment was part of the 25th Corps that entered Richmond at the end of the war.  When he returned to his home in Bertie County, he was elected to the NC General Assembly and later served as postmaster in Harrellsville, NC.  While Robbins was postmaster, he was granted two patents for inventions.  In the 1880′s, he moved to Duplin County to take advantage of the growing lumber industry and set up a sawmill, built homes, and constructed a steamboat that he operated on the Cape Fear River.

In preparation for the unveiling, a tintype of Robbins – heretofore unknown to researchers – was donated by Jesse Dowe of Magnolia to the NC History Museum (see earlier post).   The Jan. 16 event is part of the annual observance of the birthday of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.   The Chowan Discovery Group is partnering with the Duplin Historical Society in this recognition of Parker David Robbins.  Civil War re-enactors and students will participate in the program.

For more information, call 202.726.4066 or email info@chowandiscovery.org.  This is the second of three markers successfully nominated by the Chowan Discovery Group.

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Parker David Robbins Portrait donated to the North Carolina History Museum

Courtesy of Jesse Dowe and the North Carolina History Museum

Parker David Robbins was a leading figure of the Winton Triangle community.  A tintype of Robbins, previously unavailable to researchers, has been donated to the North Carolina History Museum by Jesse Dowe of Magnolia, NC.   Mr. Dowe is the owner of the Robbins home in Magnolia, and he removed items from the house after he purchased it a decade ago.  The 2-story house, probably built by Robbins in the 1880 or 1890s has since collapsed.

Earl Ijames, a curator of the Museum and a Chowan Discovery advisor, and Marvin Jones met Mr. Dowe in November.  In December, Ijames returned to Magnolia to pick up the tintype.  It appears that this portrait was made of Robbins in the 1880′s or ’90′s, twenty or more years after his well-known watercolor portrait.  That is portrait on permanent display at the Museum and was donated by Robbins’ daughter-in-law in the 1970′s.  It has been published in many books and articles.   Mr. Ijames has given the Chowan Discovery Group a digital copy of the new portrait (shown here) for its use.

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Historical Marker for the Ancient Town of Choanoac

Historical MarkerIn 1584, the first English expedition to North Carolina heard about the Choanoac people. The second expedition discovered with its visit to Choanoac that it was the largest coastal town in North Carolina. Four hundred and twenty-five years after the second expedition, a North Carolina State Highway Historical Marker will be dedicated to the memory of the Town of Choanoac. Please join Choanoac descendants and the people and citizens of the counties that were once part of Choanoac for this dedication on Friday at 3pm on October 21, two miles east of Harrellsville atMount Pleasant Missionary Baptist Church on NC 45 and Cullen Road.This event is being held during the Meherrin Indian Tribe’s annual powwow.

For more information call 202.726-4066 or email info@chowandiscovery.org. This is the first of three markers successfully nominated by the Chowan Discovery Group.

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Three New Markers for Roanoke-Chowan People

The North Carolina State Highway Historical Marker program has accepted three nominations made by the Chowan Discovery Group for Roanoke-Chowan people.   This first marker honors the town of Choanoac (Chowanoke) which was the largest coastal town in North Carolina when the second Roanoke Island expedition explored the Chowan River in 1586.  The town was first reported in 1584.  Choanoac, commonly referred to as Chowanoke, was located on the Chowan River at Swain’s Mill Road and the river in the Mount Pleasant community.  Its people were the among the first known residents of what is now Bertie, Gates and Hertford County.

A dedication program is scheduled on Friday, October 21 at 3pm at the Mount Pleasant Missionary Baptist Church, during the Meherrin Indian Tribe’s annual powwow.  There are Meherrins who are also Choanoac descendants, and they will be present for the program.  The Harrellsville Historical Association and the Chowan Discovery Group will have books available related to the history of the area.

On January 16, in Duplin County, a marker for Parker David Robbins will be dedicated in Magnolia where he lived for 30 years.  Robbins, a Gates County native and Bertie County resident, was a mechanic and farmer near Colerain.  He served as a sergeant-major in the 2nd Cavalry, United States Colored Troops during the Civil War.  Along with his brother and three cousins, he enlisted at Fort Monroe and he took part in battles from Suffolk to Richmond, eventually riding into Richmond at the end of the war.  Robbins was a representative in the North Carolina State Assembly, served as postmaster in Harrellsville and received two patents while in Harrellsville.

In Duplin County, Robbins was a builder, sawmill owner, and steamship builder and operator.  He was a Choanoac descendant. The third marker honors Ahoskie and Harrellsville’s Robert Lee Vann, lawyer and publisher.  Vann graduated from Waters Training School in Winton, attended Virginia Union Colllege and University of Pittsburgh.  His newspaper, the Pittsburgh Courier, was the nation’s largest African American publication with circulation of 250,000 in 1935.  The Courier is still a national newspaper, now 102 years old.  The marker will be dedicated in Ahoskie next year.For more information on the markers, contact Marvin T. Jones of the Chowan Discovery Group at 202.726.4066 or .  For Meherrin Powwow information visit the Meherrin Tribe.
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