How to Navigate Virtual Tour and 360 degree photos
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Touch or click circles in the bottom left of the scene to view the map, view all 22 panoramics, view video and contact information.
Timeline - All Categories
(Timeline is under construction)
- 1784
- 1853
- 1867
- 1881
- 1892
- 1902
- 1906
- 1911
- 1919
- 1926
- 1927
- 1934
- 1938
- 1939
- 1947
- 1947
- 1950
- 1951
- 1957
- 1960
- 1960
- 1972
- 1974
- 1976
- 1977
- 1977
- 1979
- 1981
- 1982
- 1986
- 2004
- 2020
Peter Oliver
Peter Oliver was a skilled Moravian craftsman in Salem. Born enslaved in Virginia on May 10, 1766, he came to Wachovia as a young man hired out to work in the Moravian town of Bethania sometime around 1784. From all indications, Peter Oliver was very shrewd and was masterfully navigated..Read More
James Shober
James Francis Shober, who would have been around 12 years old when slavery ended went on to graduate from Howard University School of Medicine, becoming the first black known physician in North Carolina. Shober was born on August 23, 1853, in or near the Moravian town of Salem (now Winston-Salem),..Read More
Historically Black Schools
In 1830-31 North Carolina passed laws that made it illegal to teach enslaved Black people to learn how to read and write. Two years after the ending of slavery, Lewis Hege, Alexander Volger (Gates), and Robert Waugh, Black lay leaders in the African Moravian Church in Salem, led the effort..Read More
Israel Clements
Israel L. Clements was elected to the Board of Commissioners in May, 1881 but died less than a year later. He was the first African American elected to public office in Winston or Salem. Upon his death a resolution by the Board called him “..one of our most faithful and..Read More
Winston-Salem State University
Dr. Simon Green Atkins established Slater Industrial School in 1892. It became the first school to offer high school courses for African Americans. The academy became a public school in 1895 and it name was changed to Slater Industrial and State Normal School tow years later. It started offering teaching certificates..Read More
Slater Hospital
Slater Hospital was the first hospital in the county for Blacks. Simon Green Atkins raised $3,650 and R.J. Reynolds matched the amount to fund the building. The hospital was located next the Salter Industrial and State Normal School. Later the building was used as a men’s dormitory and for home..Read More
Winston Mutual Insurance
Winston Industrial Insurance Association, a health and accident insurance company, was founded on August 6, 1906, by Dr. J. W. Jones and other local Black civic and business leaders. They were concerned because medical expenses and costs associated with funerals was more costly for Blacks due to lower wages and..Read More
YMCA-YWCA
According to an undated newspaper article, the “colored branch of the YMCA” formerly known as the Patterson Avenue Y.M.C.A. and now known as the Winston Lake Family YMCA has been existence since 1911. The YWCA for Blacks opened in 1917. In the 1920s, community leaders, both black and white saw..Read More
William Scales
William S. Scales was an entrepreneur beginning in the mid 1900s, operating cafes, billiard parlors, manufacturing plants, a funeral home, a bank and theaters. He was born in Winston-Salem in 1878 and worked at R J Reynolds as laborer.
Safe Bus
Public transportation did not operate in neighborhoods where most black people lived. Twenty-two competing jitney owners provided transportation for black workers. On April 24, 1926, Clarence T. Woodland organized a meeting of all the jitney owners to join forces and form a single company. After an initial meeting, 13 operators..Read More
East Winston Library
A library branch to serve African American residents of Winston-Salem opened on February 15, 1927. For four years the library was located in the Chestnut Street Branch of the YWCA. The library was named for famous African American poet, George Moses Horton. In 1953, Dr. H.D. Malloy, Sr., Dr. H...Read More
Dr. H. Rembert Malloy, Sr.
Doctor H. R. Malloy attended public schools in Winston-Salem & graduated from Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte NC. Following graduate study at the University of Chicago, he completed work for his M. D. degree at Howard University in Washington D. C. Doctor Malloy was an attending surgeon at Forsyth..Read More
Kate B. Reynolds Hospital
[smartslider3 slider=13] The Kate B. Reynolds Hospital opened in 1938 with one hundred beds for the treatment of black patients and the education of black medical students. On May 15, 1938 a “city-Wide Negro Appreciation Service was held at the Bowman Gray Memorial Stadium to honor the hospital’s donors and..Read More
Naomi McLean
Miss Naomi C. McLean opened Winston-Salem’s first Black public stenographic office in 1939, and the first Black business school in 1941. Both were located in the Bruce Building on Patterson Avenue. The school was equipped with all modern machines, plus a piano, and offered a complete secretarial course. Day and..Read More
Urban League
The Winston-Salem Urban League was founded in 1947 through the efforts of Mr. James G. Hanes who was concerned about negative race relations. Originally name the “Community Relations Project,” the organization became the Winston-Salem Urban League in 1953 and was chartered in as an affiliate of the National Urban League..Read More
Kenneth R. Williams
Kenneth R. Williams Kenneth R. Williams won an alderman seat in 1947 and became the first African American to defeat a white opponent in a twentieth-century election in a Southern city. He was the first African-American elected to the city council since 1900. However seven- nine African Americans had served..Read More
WAAA Radio
[smartslider3 slider=5] WAAA signed on the air October 29, 1950 as the first Black programmed radio station in North Carolina and with an all Black format. The station was first located on the corner of Church Street and Third Street “in the heart” of the downtown’s black business district over..Read More
Lester Ervin
On March 1, 1951, the city of Winston-Salem hired and formed the city’s and the state’s first integrated Fire Company housed at Engine Company #4 on Dunleith Avenue. Lester Ervin was one of the original eight firefighters hired. Four thousand dollars was allotted for the care and maintenance of the..Read More
Integration
After the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional, still most Black students in Winston-Salem went to all-Black schools and White students did the same. In efforts to achieve a fully integrated school system, busing was initiated which assigned and transported students outside their..Read More
Lillian Lewis
In 1960, Dr. Lillian Lewis, a professor of biology, became the first African American elected to the local school board. Her swearing in was covered by Jet in its December 29, 1960 issue. Dr. Lewis taught and several positions in the school system. Dr. Lewis was a member of Alpha..Read More
Carl Matthews
On February 8, 1960 Carl Matthews sat down at the S. H. Kress Lunch counter which would begin the sit-in-movement in Winston-Salem. On Feb. 23, 1960 eleven African-American students at Winston-Salem Teachers College and 10 white students at Wake Forest joined the protest. From Winston-Salem Teachers College were Royal Joe..Read More
John Bond, III
John P. Bond, III became the highest Black in Winston-Salem’s city government when he was promoted to deputy city manager. Other Blacks would follow including Alexander Beaty, who became the Assistant City Manager. Alexander Beaty Al Beaty, a former assistant city manager, retired in 1994 after more than 20 years..Read More
The Chronicle
The Winston-Salem Chronicle was established in 1974 by Ernie Pitt. The Chronicle was just the second African American newspaper in the city. The first was paper was The People’s Voice founded by former city alderman and founder of Russell Funeral Home, Mr. Carl Russell. It is through the legacy of..Read More
Mazie Woodruff
In 1976 Mazie Woodruff became the first African-American to be elected to the Forsyth County Board of Commissioners, on which she served for 14 years. In 1997, when Woodruff died, she was known for standing up for those in need throughout the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County community. In 1998, the City of..Read More
Vivian Burke
Vivian Burke the one of the first two African American women elected to the Winston-Salem Board Aldermen in 1977 and is the longest serving elected official in the City’s history. She served the constituents of the Northeast Ward proudly for 43 years. She is the first African American woman to..Read More
Virginia Newell
Dr. Virginia Newell’s zeal for achievement and progress among African Americans has made her a trailblazer in the city. She was one of the first two African American women elected to the Winston-Salem Board Aldermen in 1977. During her 16-year tenure representing the city’s East Ward, Newell was known as..Read More
NC Black Repertory Company
The North Carolina Black Repertory Company was founded in 1979 by Larry Leon Hamlin. It is the first professional Black theatre company in North Carolina. The Company is universally recognized for its artistic and administrative achievements and its international outreach program, The National Black Theatre Festival. Larry founded the Theatre..Read More
Larry Little
Larry D. Little, Vivian H. Burke and Virginia K. Newell were elected to the Winston-Salem Board of Aldermen, and for the first time in its history, half of the members are Black. Dr. Little served the Winston-Salem citizens of the North Ward for eight years as an alderman, winning reelection..Read More
Maya Angelou
In 1982 the global Renaissance woman, Dr. Maya Angelou, settled in Winston-Salem. This world renowned poet, educator, historian, best-selling author, actress, playwright, civil-rights activist, producer and director swiftly became a part on the cultural landscape lending her name and support to many causes in the city including the National Black..Read More
Lawrence Joel
The newly constructed Winston-Salem Coliseum is voted by the aldermen to name it after Lawrence Joel, a Black veteran who was awarded the Medal of Honor for heroism while serving in the Vietnam War.
Chief Patricia Norris
Chief Patricia Norris 2004-2008 Patricia Norris was appointed Chief of Police in February of 2004. At the time of her appointment she held the position of Assistant Chief. Not only was she the second female Chief of Police, but she was also the first African American to be appointed. After..Read More
Big 4 High School Alumni
Big 4 Alumni Association of Forsyth County- To maintain the legacy of the four historically Black high schools, the alumni associations of Atkins, Carver, Anderson and Paisley combined their annual reunions in 1995 and began celebrating together. This event became known as “The Big 4 Reunion.” It includes a former..Read More
Business
- 1784Peter Oliver
- 1906Winston Mutual Insurance
- 1919William Scales
- 1926Safe Bus
- 1939Naomi McLean
- 1950WAAA Radio
- 1974The Chronicle
Peter Oliver
Peter Oliver was a skilled Moravian craftsman in Salem. Born enslaved in Virginia on May 10, 1766, he came to Wachovia as a young man hired out to work in the Moravian town of Bethania sometime around 1784. From all indications, Peter Oliver was very shrewd and was masterfully navigated..Read More
Winston Mutual Insurance
Winston Industrial Insurance Association, a health and accident insurance company, was founded on August 6, 1906, by Dr. J. W. Jones and other local Black civic and business leaders. They were concerned because medical expenses and costs associated with funerals was more costly for Blacks due to lower wages and..Read More
William Scales
William S. Scales was an entrepreneur beginning in the mid 1900s, operating cafes, billiard parlors, manufacturing plants, a funeral home, a bank and theaters. He was born in Winston-Salem in 1878 and worked at R J Reynolds as laborer.
Safe Bus
Public transportation did not operate in neighborhoods where most black people lived. Twenty-two competing jitney owners provided transportation for black workers. On April 24, 1926, Clarence T. Woodland organized a meeting of all the jitney owners to join forces and form a single company. After an initial meeting, 13 operators..Read More
Naomi McLean
Miss Naomi C. McLean opened Winston-Salem’s first Black public stenographic office in 1939, and the first Black business school in 1941. Both were located in the Bruce Building on Patterson Avenue. The school was equipped with all modern machines, plus a piano, and offered a complete secretarial course. Day and..Read More
WAAA Radio
[smartslider3 slider=5] WAAA signed on the air October 29, 1950 as the first Black programmed radio station in North Carolina and with an all Black format. The station was first located on the corner of Church Street and Third Street “in the heart” of the downtown’s black business district over..Read More
The Chronicle
The Winston-Salem Chronicle was established in 1974 by Ernie Pitt. The Chronicle was just the second African American newspaper in the city. The first was paper was The People’s Voice founded by former city alderman and founder of Russell Funeral Home, Mr. Carl Russell. It is through the legacy of..Read More
Cultural
- 1911YMCA-YWCA
- 1927East Winston Library
- 1947Urban League
- 1979NC Black Repertory Company
- 1982Maya Angelou
YMCA-YWCA
According to an undated newspaper article, the “colored branch of the YMCA” formerly known as the Patterson Avenue Y.M.C.A. and now known as the Winston Lake Family YMCA has been existence since 1911. The YWCA for Blacks opened in 1917. In the 1920s, community leaders, both black and white saw..Read More
East Winston Library
A library branch to serve African American residents of Winston-Salem opened on February 15, 1927. For four years the library was located in the Chestnut Street Branch of the YWCA. The library was named for famous African American poet, George Moses Horton. In 1953, Dr. H.D. Malloy, Sr., Dr. H...Read More
Urban League
The Winston-Salem Urban League was founded in 1947 through the efforts of Mr. James G. Hanes who was concerned about negative race relations. Originally name the “Community Relations Project,” the organization became the Winston-Salem Urban League in 1953 and was chartered in as an affiliate of the National Urban League..Read More
NC Black Repertory Company
The North Carolina Black Repertory Company was founded in 1979 by Larry Leon Hamlin. It is the first professional Black theatre company in North Carolina. The Company is universally recognized for its artistic and administrative achievements and its international outreach program, The National Black Theatre Festival. Larry founded the Theatre..Read More
Maya Angelou
In 1982 the global Renaissance woman, Dr. Maya Angelou, settled in Winston-Salem. This world renowned poet, educator, historian, best-selling author, actress, playwright, civil-rights activist, producer and director swiftly became a part on the cultural landscape lending her name and support to many causes in the city including the National Black..Read More
Education
- 1867Historically Black Schools
- 1892Winston-Salem State University
- 1957Integration
- 1960Lillian Lewis
- 2020Big 4 High School Alumni
Historically Black Schools
In 1830-31 North Carolina passed laws that made it illegal to teach enslaved Black people to learn how to read and write. Two years after the ending of slavery, Lewis Hege, Alexander Volger (Gates), and Robert Waugh, Black lay leaders in the African Moravian Church in Salem, led the effort..Read More
Winston-Salem State University
Dr. Simon Green Atkins established Slater Industrial School in 1892. It became the first school to offer high school courses for African Americans. The academy became a public school in 1895 and it name was changed to Slater Industrial and State Normal School tow years later. It started offering teaching certificates..Read More
Integration
After the 1954 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that racial segregation in public schools was unconstitutional, still most Black students in Winston-Salem went to all-Black schools and White students did the same. In efforts to achieve a fully integrated school system, busing was initiated which assigned and transported students outside their..Read More
Lillian Lewis
In 1960, Dr. Lillian Lewis, a professor of biology, became the first African American elected to the local school board. Her swearing in was covered by Jet in its December 29, 1960 issue. Dr. Lewis taught and several positions in the school system. Dr. Lewis was a member of Alpha..Read More
Big 4 High School Alumni
Big 4 Alumni Association of Forsyth County- To maintain the legacy of the four historically Black high schools, the alumni associations of Atkins, Carver, Anderson and Paisley combined their annual reunions in 1995 and began celebrating together. This event became known as “The Big 4 Reunion.” It includes a former..Read More
Government
- 1881Israel Clements
- 1947Kenneth R. Williams
- 1951Lester Ervin
- 1972John Bond, III
- 1976Mazie Woodruff
- 1977Vivian Burke
- 1977Virginia Newell
- 1981Larry Little
- 1986Lawrence Joel
- 2004Chief Patricia Norris
Israel Clements
Israel L. Clements was elected to the Board of Commissioners in May, 1881 but died less than a year later. He was the first African American elected to public office in Winston or Salem. Upon his death a resolution by the Board called him “..one of our most faithful and..Read More
Kenneth R. Williams
Kenneth R. Williams Kenneth R. Williams won an alderman seat in 1947 and became the first African American to defeat a white opponent in a twentieth-century election in a Southern city. He was the first African-American elected to the city council since 1900. However seven- nine African Americans had served..Read More
Lester Ervin
On March 1, 1951, the city of Winston-Salem hired and formed the city’s and the state’s first integrated Fire Company housed at Engine Company #4 on Dunleith Avenue. Lester Ervin was one of the original eight firefighters hired. Four thousand dollars was allotted for the care and maintenance of the..Read More
John Bond, III
John P. Bond, III became the highest Black in Winston-Salem’s city government when he was promoted to deputy city manager. Other Blacks would follow including Alexander Beaty, who became the Assistant City Manager. Alexander Beaty Al Beaty, a former assistant city manager, retired in 1994 after more than 20 years..Read More
Mazie Woodruff
In 1976 Mazie Woodruff became the first African-American to be elected to the Forsyth County Board of Commissioners, on which she served for 14 years. In 1997, when Woodruff died, she was known for standing up for those in need throughout the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County community. In 1998, the City of..Read More
Vivian Burke
Vivian Burke the one of the first two African American women elected to the Winston-Salem Board Aldermen in 1977 and is the longest serving elected official in the City’s history. She served the constituents of the Northeast Ward proudly for 43 years. She is the first African American woman to..Read More
Virginia Newell
Dr. Virginia Newell’s zeal for achievement and progress among African Americans has made her a trailblazer in the city. She was one of the first two African American women elected to the Winston-Salem Board Aldermen in 1977. During her 16-year tenure representing the city’s East Ward, Newell was known as..Read More
Larry Little
Larry D. Little, Vivian H. Burke and Virginia K. Newell were elected to the Winston-Salem Board of Aldermen, and for the first time in its history, half of the members are Black. Dr. Little served the Winston-Salem citizens of the North Ward for eight years as an alderman, winning reelection..Read More
Lawrence Joel
The newly constructed Winston-Salem Coliseum is voted by the aldermen to name it after Lawrence Joel, a Black veteran who was awarded the Medal of Honor for heroism while serving in the Vietnam War.
Chief Patricia Norris
Chief Patricia Norris 2004-2008 Patricia Norris was appointed Chief of Police in February of 2004. At the time of her appointment she held the position of Assistant Chief. Not only was she the second female Chief of Police, but she was also the first African American to be appointed. After..Read More
Health
James Shober
James Francis Shober, who would have been around 12 years old when slavery ended went on to graduate from Howard University School of Medicine, becoming the first black known physician in North Carolina. Shober was born on August 23, 1853, in or near the Moravian town of Salem (now Winston-Salem),..Read More
Slater Hospital
Slater Hospital was the first hospital in the county for Blacks. Simon Green Atkins raised $3,650 and R.J. Reynolds matched the amount to fund the building. The hospital was located next the Salter Industrial and State Normal School. Later the building was used as a men’s dormitory and for home..Read More
Dr. H. Rembert Malloy, Sr.
Doctor H. R. Malloy attended public schools in Winston-Salem & graduated from Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte NC. Following graduate study at the University of Chicago, he completed work for his M. D. degree at Howard University in Washington D. C. Doctor Malloy was an attending surgeon at Forsyth..Read More
Kate B. Reynolds Hospital
[smartslider3 slider=13] The Kate B. Reynolds Hospital opened in 1938 with one hundred beds for the treatment of black patients and the education of black medical students. On May 15, 1938 a “city-Wide Negro Appreciation Service was held at the Bowman Gray Memorial Stadium to honor the hospital’s donors and..Read More
Organizations
YMCA-YWCA
According to an undated newspaper article, the “colored branch of the YMCA” formerly known as the Patterson Avenue Y.M.C.A. and now known as the Winston Lake Family YMCA has been existence since 1911. The YWCA for Blacks opened in 1917. In the 1920s, community leaders, both black and white saw..Read More
East Winston Library
A library branch to serve African American residents of Winston-Salem opened on February 15, 1927. For four years the library was located in the Chestnut Street Branch of the YWCA. The library was named for famous African American poet, George Moses Horton. In 1953, Dr. H.D. Malloy, Sr., Dr. H...Read More
Urban League
The Winston-Salem Urban League was founded in 1947 through the efforts of Mr. James G. Hanes who was concerned about negative race relations. Originally name the “Community Relations Project,” the organization became the Winston-Salem Urban League in 1953 and was chartered in as an affiliate of the National Urban League..Read More
NC Black Repertory Company
The North Carolina Black Repertory Company was founded in 1979 by Larry Leon Hamlin. It is the first professional Black theatre company in North Carolina. The Company is universally recognized for its artistic and administrative achievements and its international outreach program, The National Black Theatre Festival. Larry founded the Theatre..Read More
Women
- 1939Naomi McLean
- 1960Lillian Lewis
- 1976Mazie Woodruff
- 1977Vivian Burke
- 1977Virginia Newell
- 1982Maya Angelou
- 2004Chief Patricia Norris
Naomi McLean
Miss Naomi C. McLean opened Winston-Salem’s first Black public stenographic office in 1939, and the first Black business school in 1941. Both were located in the Bruce Building on Patterson Avenue. The school was equipped with all modern machines, plus a piano, and offered a complete secretarial course. Day and..Read More
Lillian Lewis
In 1960, Dr. Lillian Lewis, a professor of biology, became the first African American elected to the local school board. Her swearing in was covered by Jet in its December 29, 1960 issue. Dr. Lewis taught and several positions in the school system. Dr. Lewis was a member of Alpha..Read More
Mazie Woodruff
In 1976 Mazie Woodruff became the first African-American to be elected to the Forsyth County Board of Commissioners, on which she served for 14 years. In 1997, when Woodruff died, she was known for standing up for those in need throughout the Winston-Salem/Forsyth County community. In 1998, the City of..Read More
Vivian Burke
Vivian Burke the one of the first two African American women elected to the Winston-Salem Board Aldermen in 1977 and is the longest serving elected official in the City’s history. She served the constituents of the Northeast Ward proudly for 43 years. She is the first African American woman to..Read More
Virginia Newell
Dr. Virginia Newell’s zeal for achievement and progress among African Americans has made her a trailblazer in the city. She was one of the first two African American women elected to the Winston-Salem Board Aldermen in 1977. During her 16-year tenure representing the city’s East Ward, Newell was known as..Read More
Maya Angelou
In 1982 the global Renaissance woman, Dr. Maya Angelou, settled in Winston-Salem. This world renowned poet, educator, historian, best-selling author, actress, playwright, civil-rights activist, producer and director swiftly became a part on the cultural landscape lending her name and support to many causes in the city including the National Black..Read More
Chief Patricia Norris
Chief Patricia Norris 2004-2008 Patricia Norris was appointed Chief of Police in February of 2004. At the time of her appointment she held the position of Assistant Chief. Not only was she the second female Chief of Police, but she was also the first African American to be appointed. After..Read More
Men
- 1853James Shober
- 1881Israel Clements
- 1892Winston-Salem State University
- 1919William Scales
- 1934Dr. H. Rembert Malloy, Sr.
- 1947Kenneth R. Williams
- 1951Lester Ervin
- 1960Carl Matthews
- 1972John Bond, III
- 1974The Chronicle
- 1979NC Black Repertory Company
- 1981Larry Little
- 1986Lawrence Joel
James Shober
James Francis Shober, who would have been around 12 years old when slavery ended went on to graduate from Howard University School of Medicine, becoming the first black known physician in North Carolina. Shober was born on August 23, 1853, in or near the Moravian town of Salem (now Winston-Salem),..Read More
Israel Clements
Israel L. Clements was elected to the Board of Commissioners in May, 1881 but died less than a year later. He was the first African American elected to public office in Winston or Salem. Upon his death a resolution by the Board called him “..one of our most faithful and..Read More
Winston-Salem State University
Dr. Simon Green Atkins established Slater Industrial School in 1892. It became the first school to offer high school courses for African Americans. The academy became a public school in 1895 and it name was changed to Slater Industrial and State Normal School tow years later. It started offering teaching certificates..Read More
William Scales
William S. Scales was an entrepreneur beginning in the mid 1900s, operating cafes, billiard parlors, manufacturing plants, a funeral home, a bank and theaters. He was born in Winston-Salem in 1878 and worked at R J Reynolds as laborer.
Dr. H. Rembert Malloy, Sr.
Doctor H. R. Malloy attended public schools in Winston-Salem & graduated from Johnson C. Smith University in Charlotte NC. Following graduate study at the University of Chicago, he completed work for his M. D. degree at Howard University in Washington D. C. Doctor Malloy was an attending surgeon at Forsyth..Read More
Kenneth R. Williams
Kenneth R. Williams Kenneth R. Williams won an alderman seat in 1947 and became the first African American to defeat a white opponent in a twentieth-century election in a Southern city. He was the first African-American elected to the city council since 1900. However seven- nine African Americans had served..Read More
Lester Ervin
On March 1, 1951, the city of Winston-Salem hired and formed the city’s and the state’s first integrated Fire Company housed at Engine Company #4 on Dunleith Avenue. Lester Ervin was one of the original eight firefighters hired. Four thousand dollars was allotted for the care and maintenance of the..Read More
Carl Matthews
On February 8, 1960 Carl Matthews sat down at the S. H. Kress Lunch counter which would begin the sit-in-movement in Winston-Salem. On Feb. 23, 1960 eleven African-American students at Winston-Salem Teachers College and 10 white students at Wake Forest joined the protest. From Winston-Salem Teachers College were Royal Joe..Read More
John Bond, III
John P. Bond, III became the highest Black in Winston-Salem’s city government when he was promoted to deputy city manager. Other Blacks would follow including Alexander Beaty, who became the Assistant City Manager. Alexander Beaty Al Beaty, a former assistant city manager, retired in 1994 after more than 20 years..Read More
The Chronicle
The Winston-Salem Chronicle was established in 1974 by Ernie Pitt. The Chronicle was just the second African American newspaper in the city. The first was paper was The People’s Voice founded by former city alderman and founder of Russell Funeral Home, Mr. Carl Russell. It is through the legacy of..Read More
NC Black Repertory Company
The North Carolina Black Repertory Company was founded in 1979 by Larry Leon Hamlin. It is the first professional Black theatre company in North Carolina. The Company is universally recognized for its artistic and administrative achievements and its international outreach program, The National Black Theatre Festival. Larry founded the Theatre..Read More
Larry Little
Larry D. Little, Vivian H. Burke and Virginia K. Newell were elected to the Winston-Salem Board of Aldermen, and for the first time in its history, half of the members are Black. Dr. Little served the Winston-Salem citizens of the North Ward for eight years as an alderman, winning reelection..Read More
Lawrence Joel
The newly constructed Winston-Salem Coliseum is voted by the aldermen to name it after Lawrence Joel, a Black veteran who was awarded the Medal of Honor for heroism while serving in the Vietnam War.