"negro dog" "red light" house 4-H Club 10th Cavalry Regiment 50th anniversary 60th anniversary 100th anniversary 135th Regiment 500 block 1619 A.M.E. The obituary of Carr… on “So you’ll know wh… The obituary of Delp… on It was on this account that he… Ladypatricia205 on Lane Street Project: the Vick… Lane Street Project: Nunnie Barnes, pt.Lane Street Project: the Vick family plot.Posted in 1820s, 1830s, Church, Religion, Slavery, Wilson County and tagged dismissal, enslaved people, excommunication, Primitive Baptist Church on Decemby Lisa Y. Originals now housed at North Carolina State Archives. Peter, a servant of Patience Aycock charged with Disobedience to his MistressĬopy of documents courtesy of J.Hannah, a servant of James Aycock sen’r. Some may have lived to see Emancipation, but even if they remained in Wilson County, I have no way to identify them further. (Bless his heart.) As Primitive Baptists did not practice infant baptism, the 14 were, if not adults, then nearly so, and thus were all born in the 1700s or early 1800s. The page includes references to 14 enslaved African-Americans, including one man cast out for disobeying his mistress. voluntarily, to join another church, as well as members excommunicated for serious infractions. This page continues with names of members “dismissed by letter,” i.e. (It closed its doors in 2010.) The church’s nineteenth and early twentieth-century records includes names of enslaved and freed African-American members, who worshipped with the congregation as second-class Christians even after Emancipation. Lower Black Creek Primitive Baptist Church, founded in 1783, was the second church organized in what is now Wilson County.
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