Saturday, April 5, 2014

Prospect High Boys Basketball Team of 1927 - "The Champions"



In the late winter of 1926, N. C. State College (N. C. State University or simply “State”) created and began a high school boys basketball tournament.  It seems to have been officially called “N. C. State College Invitational Basketball Tournament” and took place over a two and one half day period.  To make it fair, they divided the participating teams into three classes: A, B, and C based on the size and classification of the high school.

The college had a purpose behind this event – they wanted better communication between the schools of the state and the college itself.  All of this is per their 1927 Yearbook, The Agromeck. 

Continuing with the yearbook’s write-up found on page 249:  “It was decided that in view of the State elimination as sponsored by the University, that a basketball tournament open to all high schools was the best chance” [for contact].

That first year was far more successful than they ever dreamed – so successful that the 1927 year’s entries doubled the 72 schools entered the prior year.  They made the decision to limit the number of entries to 58 schools. 

That year, 1927, the Class C winners were the Prospect Boys Basketball Team from Union County, North Carolina. 

In the late Mary Hinson Whitaker’s book, Prospect Community Union County, North Carolina, 1817-1994, she recounts:

In 1927 Prospect’s boys’ team rode to Raleigh in freezing cold to participate in Class C schools tourney.  They played without all of their substitutes because they could not afford to take two cars.  They won the tournament, mostly on pure determination.  Perhaps, they also played harder because they realized they were underdogs, having come from a small, rural school without many of the advantages that others had.

Only 7 players made the trip in March of '27 – they are in the photo here from page 92 of the same book.  Whitaker lists them [not the order of the photo]:  Bundy Belk, Dowd Rape, Cyrus Purser, Ray Lathan, Frank Crane, Stanley Cox, and Clayton Purser. Added note:  Turns out that Whitaker had the names in correct order except for Belk - moving Belk to the third place makes the list correct.  A granddaughter of Dowd Rape correctly identified him as the first one on the left.  Still later, right under our noses at the library, this same (original) photo was shared by The Heritage Room with the Enquirer-Journal's "A Pictorial History of Union County, North Carolina (Vol. I)" published in 2005.  The caption had the order (surnames only listed here at this blog post) as:  Rape, Purser, Belk, Lathan, Crane, Cox & Purser. 

The son of the late Bundy Belk, whose visit to the Dickerson Room led to this blog post, shared that when they arrived in Raleigh, it was the first time they had ever played indoors.  Whitaker also points out in her book that the team played and practiced on a hard-pack dirt court.

It is probable that they did play some local games occasionally indoors, as there is evidence of  area school basketball games being played on a court at Lake Tonawanda, Monroe’s amusement center of long ago.  It is most likely that court was also the dance hall known to have been there.

Whitaker notes the rest of the team was:  Hugh Nesbit, Thurman Rape, Vern Moore, Wesley Hunter; the Principal of the school was P. O. Purser; Assistant, Tommy Hoover.

There was little fanfare made about this win in our local papers.   However, in the March 14, 1927 issue of The Monroe Enquirer (p. 5) there appeared the following recognition, over ten days after their win:

Next Thursday night at 8 p.m. Prospect and Waxhaw will play the first of a series of three games to decide the county championship.  Prospect has just returned from Raleigh, bringing home with them a silver cup, eight gold basketballs, and the championship of group ‘C.”  Waxhaw has won no laurels outside the county, but her team is recognized as a strong one.  Place, Lake Tonawanda.  Admission 25 cents.

In my effort to seek out the facts surrounding this event one thing was constant in my mind.

These 7 young men from the Prospect area of Union County reached for something that probably seemed just about impossible.  They crammed themselves into a single car (or truck perhaps, a more logical choice from down our way), bore the discomforts that so many would refuse to do so today and literally played their hearts out. 

Wow – what a story!  The stuff movies are made of, yes? 

Now that we have the order of the names confirmed, if you have anything else to share about this event, you can reach me at the Dickerson Room of the Union County Public Library in Monroe, NC.  704-283-8184 x224. 


Sources:

- Mary Hinson Whitaker’s “Prospect Community” (complete title in blog post)
- North Carolina State University 1927 Yearbook – accessed online a transcript of the page cited above at
http://www.e-yearbook.com/yearbooks/North_Carolina_State_University_Agromeck_Yearbook/1927/Page_249.html
NOTE:  On this same page was given the winners for both 1926 & '27:  Prospect won against a school listed as "Everetts". 
- Conversation with Michael E. Belk, April 4, 2014 at the Union County Public Library
-Amanda, granddaughter of Dowd Rape, visited The Dickerson Room to id her grandfather in the photo.
-A Pictorial History of Union County, North Carolina (Vol. I) - http://opac.union.lib.nc.us:8080/?config=pac#section=resource&resourceid=231591766&currentIndex=1&view=fullDetailsDetailsTab
For newspaper articles collected during research for this post please ask for:  UCVF: Union County Schools History - Prospect (at the Union County Public Library).
This post revised/tweaked several times over the course of April 5-6; Information about the team beaten for the win was added April 7, 2014.   This post was again revised on May 13, 2014 to update the seven names of the winning team and to add a link to catalog record of the book that contains a better copy of the original photo owned by The Heritage Room, not to be confused with The Dickerson Room.

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Col. Walkup's Map

For years I had pondered over poor black and white copies (and poorly cited too) of this map.

Along the side is written "Made by Col Sam Walkup".  A year is attributed to the map:  1866.  (none of this is seen on this image, which is only the center portion of the map)

To write about Col. Walkup would require another post (and yes, maybe I'll do that one day) but suffice it to say that Samuel Hoey Walkup (1818-1876) was a "Renaissance Man" - he played the flute, was a lawyer (graduate of Chapel Hill), statesman (elected to the State Legislature), soldier (a general in the State Militia, later a Colonel in the Confederate Army - 48th N.C.), a diarist and letter-writer of his day.  But this post was to be about the map!

I once made an effort to find the real map and I contacted the wonderful folks at Chapel Hill, knowing that they had at least one of his diaries.  I figured they had the map and that they would scan it and post it at their map site.  They did their very best to find the map but it wasn't there.  And then I remembered that one of the books that used the image (again, very poor quality) had noted it was from the State Archives.  I apologized and then scoured the N. C. State Archives' catalog online and came up empty-handed.

In short, I gave up.

The image shown here was shared by researcher David McCorkle.  He found it just inside a Union County Court Minutes book at the North Carolina State Archives. (CR 097.311.3 Union County Superior Court Minute Docket 1866-1877 - the map is drawn on the very first page)

Imagine the shouting (yes, of joy!) when he sent me a recent email saying, 'hey, look what I found drawn in an odd place!' (or something like that - sorry David, I do not have your email in front of me).

Long story short, I ordered a scanned image of the map for the Dickerson Room of the Union County Public Library.  We hope to be able to print it out large enough for study.

We are, well, at least I am, excited!

And I continue to ponder about the 'why' of the map.  If Col. Walkup were here today I would like to know was this for his own purpose?  Did he just want to keep track of his neighbors?  If you look at the image here, Walkup's home is drawn in blue and labeled with his initials "SHW".  (he also  takes the time to actually give his home a roof)

That alone has led me to believe that his home, later in the way of Belk's new building (built around 1904 but don't quote me on this - it would be the first time that Belk built a building for his store in Monroe though), was turned and moved to face Franklin Street.

Walkup would be long dead by that time but his half-sister, mother of [William] Henry Belk and married to a Simpson at the time, was probably living in the house.  I say "probably" as I have no real proof of that.  If you study the Sanborn Maps of Monroe, you will  find that a house appears behind the Lee Department Store building in 1908 (who would deliberately build a house behind a department store???) - it is my belief that this was Col. Walkup's former home -- turned and moved.  And there is proof that the house behind the Lee Building was Mrs. Sarah Walkup Belk Simpson's!

Walkup's home can be seen in Sanborn Maps for 1885, 1892, 1897, and 1902.  Not to mention the 1882 Gray's New Map (see http://dc.lib.unc.edu/u?/ncmaps,1003) which has "S. H. Walkup" written over the house in question (I believe the exact same house seen here in McCorkle's image).

I have gone on long enough at this time - but suffice it to say that maps are fascinating and I look forward to having a high quality image of Walkup's map and finally knowing where the original truly is!

To learn more visit the Dickerson Room of the Union County Public Library (Monroe, NC) and ask for:  Civil War file, Walkup, Locked File 3, Drawer 1.  Within this file has been assembled images of the various maps for pondering over the home and articles/information found on Samuel Hoey Walkup.

A nice bio was written by Mike Elliott about Col. Walkup and his wife, Margaret Pamelia (Minnie) Reece Price.  It can be found in "The Heritage of Union County, North Carolina" Volume I, pp 444-445.

You should also be able to find information about him on the Internet.

As of May 2018 a jpg image of this map is now at the library's web site at this link

-Patricia Poland, January 8, 2014 (tweaked a bit 1-9-14, revised 1-16-14 to clarify location of map in court minute book, give the year as 'attributed' and to not imply that the map was 'stuck' in the book)