482-4418 Lassiter links academia, life Skills See B1 Rocky Hock native Bunch turns 100 SeeB1 Artifacts reveal historical grounds Town worker donates treasure to history By Ritchie E. Starnes and Rebecca Bunch Editor Staff Writer It all started with the fortuitous discovery of a coin - a 1786 Connecticut Copper. Since then, Bobby Wil liams, 64, has spent the last six years consumed with research and combing the surrounding grounds of Edenton’s wastewater treatment plant, located off Macedonia Road. Williams; a town employee since 2004, spends his lunch hour scouring the hallowed earth where the Blenheim Manor House, later known as the • Pagett Plantation, once stood centuries ago. Penel ope Barker of the Edenton Tea Party fame, was among the heirs of the property and once lived at the estate. First armed with a metal detector and an archaeologi cal survey, dating back to the town’s acquisition of the land for the treatment ' plant, Williams dedicated his spare time to roaming . the property What followed is a bounty of artifacts that has drawn the interest of historians and anthropolo gists. “They say ‘there must have been a collector who lived there,’ but I think different,” Williams said. "There was something go ing on there.” *>, Williams has unearthed f a number of military artifacts, dating back to the Revolutionary War or the War of 1812. There are musket balls, bullet-pierced brass buttons. Williams points to the fact that academicians cite the absence of records that would prove that the area was once home to military skirmishes from that era. “They don’t have any thing that shows there was any military activity here,” Williams said. “Who said some didn’t run off. They marched from St. Augustine (Florida) to Yorktown (Penn sylvania). Who knows what “v route they took?” Williams believes that there are enough artifacts to By Rebecca Bunch Staff Writer Next month during its an nual retreat, the Edenton Town Council is expected to look at ways to increase its reserve funds. The town’s accountant, Jim Winston, said that while the town had a “clean” au dit, meaning that there were no areas of concern, he rec ommended that the town in crease its reserve funds to 40 percent. Currently, the town’s reserves are at 33 percent. “Several years ago the ©2009 The Chowan Herald All Rights Reserved Town accountant: Raise reserves to 40 percent CHOWAN HERALD PHOTOS BY RITCHIE E. STARNES Bobby Williams found an assortment of artifacts, such as these pictured. Among the items are part of a meat cleaver, fork, currency, handmade brick, and the bones and teeth of a slaughtered hog. support the past presence of a Spanish fort. “I don’t think it’s a Span ish site, but it’s interesting,” said Charles Ewen, profes sor of anthropology at East Carolina University. Williams has deferred council set a goal to grow the general fund reserve to thir ty percent,” Mayor Roland Vaughan said. “We met and exceeded that goal as of June 30. “(Jim Winston) has urged us to get to 40 percent, which is what the average reserve is for municipalities with popu lations of 5 to 10,000 people and with electric systems.” The mayor acknowledged that achieving that goal would require some creative thinking. “It will be a challenge to increase the reserve, and this is a goal that the council will like discussion at our upcom ing Vision Session (retreat).” Town Manager Anne-Marie Knighton said that Winston has not made specific recom See RESERVES on Page 2A to Ewen for his expertise. Ewen has sent an archaeo logical team of students to the site with plans for fur ther study. Tests show that that there are anomalies beneath the surface. It also confirmed that there are ' Former deputy heads to court From staff reports The former veteran Chowan County Sheriffs deputy charged with nine sexual offenses involving a high school student heads to court Monday. William Greg Whitehurst, 48, is scheduled to appear in Superior Court and answer the charges related to an al leged 2005 incident. At the time, Whitehurst was work ing as a school resource of ficer (SRO) at John A. Hol mes High School. Charges include three counts of sec ond-degree sexual offense, three counts of indecent liberties with a student, and three counts of sexual ac tivities with a student. Whitehurst was recog In the left photo, town of Edenton employee Bobby Wil liams points to a spot on the ground where he found a rare coin believed to associated with the history of the colonial Blenheim Manor, later known as the Pagett Plantation. Inspired by the discovery near the town’s wastewater treatment plant, Williams spent six years scour ing the historical site. traces of a brick structure still underground. Williams said his research suggests that there’s a cellar. Williams also solicited the assistance of the University of Nofre Dame, who identi fied the original coin that set the town employee in motion. Other artifacts from the early 18th century through the early 19th century include buckles, a wine tap, a pocketknife, blacksmith tools, upholstery tacks, horse tack, spurs, latches and assorted pieces of ce ramics, pottery, and earth enware. Ewen acknowledged that the artifacts suggest that the home was one of wealth and that the families enjoyed affluence. It’s that affluence and the types of recovered artifacts that also indicate that the people of the See WILLIAMS on Page 2A nized as the ‘04 Law En forcement Officer of the Year by the Ameri can Legion Post 40. The com- 1 i i 1 plaint was Whitehurst originally reported directly to the State Bureau of Investigation in Elizabeth City in 2008. At that time, Whitehurst was placed on administrative leave, pending the probe. Whitehurst was dis missed from the Sheriffs Office earlier this year after 21 years on the job. Prior to working as a SRO, * Whitehurst worked in civil processing and patrol. CHOWAN HERALD PHOTO BY RITCHIE L STARNES • Edenton native Adrian Backus addresses hundreds at Monday’s Martin Luther King Jr. observance at Swain Auditorium. Backus calls for By Ritchie E. Starnes Editor “I don’t look at the color of opportunity, I look for the op portunity” Those were a sample of the words Edenton native Adrian Backus delivered at Monday’s Martin Luther King Jr. ob servance. Backus encour aged the hundreds that filled Swain Auditorium to stay King’s course of seeking so cial improvements. “Don’t be crying about what you don’t have,” Backus added. He reminded those in at tendance that blacks have been conditioned to resist opportunities, adding a few personal anecdotes from his days living in Edenton whei’e King once visited and spoke in 1962. Despite Backus profes sional and personal success, he said that he still feels the emotional scars that cause him anxiety when mingling with whites in contemporary settings. , He warned those of his generation not to succumb to such scars and transfer their roots of hate to their chil dren. “We have been conditioned to sit where we are and say ‘why should I get involved,”’ Backus said. Backus encouraged the Thieves strike two downtown businesses From staff reports Thieves broke into two downtown businesses and stole assorted items, includ ing cash, according to Eden ton police. Employees arriving to work Friday morning at Blount’s Drug Store and Eye Care Center of Edenton found that their respective businesses had been broken into sometime after closing Thursday, police say. Police were first called to Blount’s at 8 a.m. Friday where thieves had pried ajar bar-covered windows at the rear of building and entered, said Jim Blount, storeowner. Blount said his store was “trashed.” He declined to specify what had been stolen, but a police press release in dicated that drugs and undis closed amount of cash were among the items taken. Police Chief Jay Forten bery said he believes that the suspects targeted the busi nesses because of drugs. ‘‘Don’t be crying about what you don’t have” Adrian Backus Speaking at Monday’s Martin Luther King observance youth in attendance to stop with their insolent behavior and, instead, become produc tive citizens in their commu nity “This is not the time to sit on our backside and do noth ing,” he added. “I don’t want to hear an other black man tell me they don’t want to work. You find work!” Backus pointed to the im portance of building commu nities without racial barriers, using the current plight in Haiti as a reminder that much needs to be done throughout the world. He urged everyone to work to improve relation ships regardless of race. “You can’t go your own way,. you have to do it with others,” Backus said. Backus is a ’72 graduate of John A. Holmes High School. He currently serves as the vice president of information $nd technology at Princeton Theological Seminary While no drugs were tak en from the Eye Care Cen ter, thieves made off with a laptop computer, a medical optical device, and an undis closed amount of currency, according to police reports. As with Blount’s, the sus pects entered through a bro ken window. “They had a busy night,” said Blount, referring to a number of other downtown businesses that he learned were unsuccessfully targeted during the night. “It’s very frustrating,” Blount added. “I feel thor oughly violated.” Blount said that the break in marks only the second af ter hours crime at the store in his 41 years of operation. Police have no suspects at this time, but evidence was collected from the crime scenes and forwarded to the State Bureau of Investiga tion for analysis, Fortenbery said. Anyone with informa tion is asked to call Edenton police at (252) 482-5144.