Tuesday, July 14, 2020

Tarboro Town Council Took No Vote On Removing The Monument On The Town Common (Currently 5 to 3 Against)


I was wondering where WHIG-TV was today during the Rocky Mount City Council meeting so I learned they were in Tarboro at the Tarboro Town Council Meeting.

I understand that during Public Comments Monika Fleming historian of Edgecombe County and her husband started out the conversation about the monument on the Town Common.

I understand Rev. Kenneth Parker, Marquetta Dickens and Alissa Ruffin to remove monument. 

Commissioner Viola Harris said she lives across the street from the statue and she agreed with the Caucasians who support not taking it down and the people need to vote on it. Harris said let the people vote. Doris Stith interviewed young people and elderly and they all wanted it to go. 

Rev. J.O. Williams spoke about a cross being burned in his yard. Quincy Robinson said need to write the wrong.

I understand there were several Caucasians who spoke in support of not removing the statue.

I understand the 3 Black council members were for removing the statue while the Caucasian members were all against. 

I can’t wait to see who all did speak especially to see how many that attended the Sympathy Walk that spoke either in favor or against removing the Confederate Monument.

I understand WHIG-TV videoed so the meeting so I look forward to watching the video. 

Information was from some sources that attended the meeting.

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Thank You Great Grandfather

3. 1877. " In the meantime the fact that the Negroes constituted such a great majority gave indications that radical domination might continue. Especially this was true in regard to town administration. This field of activity offered a greater opportunity in exercising tact and ingenuity than that of county or state politics. To meet this political emergency arose William Pippen. (William Mayo, my great grandfather. He traveled to New York City after the War in his Confederate uniform as that was all he possessed, asked a friend of his father's if he would lend him money to start a mercantile shop in Tarboro, which he did, and was so successful that he built the *William Mayo Pippen House beside the library in 1870 while acquiring numerous other lots. BT) He conceived a plan by which the whites could control town affairs in Tarboro. 

The old citizens will recall that prior to 1875, there were no wards or districts in the town of Tarboro; in fact, no such provision had been anticipated in the town charter. (1760) A census of the city showed that the Negroes had the majority and invariably elected all three commissioners. Mr. Pippen appeared before the State Legislature and succeeded in having the charter amended, dividing the town into three wards. The first and second wards contained the majority of whites in the central part of town, while the third ward included the suburbs, where the Negroes lived. This placed the Negroes in a position to carry only one ward, and the whites the remaining two wards, and Negro domination collapsed." 

4 comments:

  1. They didn't take a vote in Asheville either and this is
    Appalachian land - pro Confederate. A disgrace along with
    these crappy reparations.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Nothing good about it as far as I am concerned.
      Brock, remember the woman, Rachel Ruit, whom I sent you a
      video of in downtown Asheville, cussing the inhuman ones
      out - well she was killed by a firetruck pickup truck.
      Thought this was disconcerting. I don't know what her
      hx was but she wouldn't stand down.

      Delete
    2. Thanks, just checked it out and would like to see the PD report.

      Delete