■MMilillillllllililii ILESTONE EDITIO: ( AN IN~STITUTION OF COMMUNITY SERVICE SINCE 1909 ) Hertford County 1759-1959 The Herald 1909-1959 8 Pages—This Seciion Ahoskie, N. C. Milestone Year—1959 Isolation Ends for c People: From Lost Provinces to Auto Age: Pioneer Roadbuiiding in Hertford “The Lost Provinces.” That is the way many people characterized the Pvoanoke-Chowan and Hertford County in the early years of the 20th century. It was the truth. For, with new means of transportation beginning to knit the nation together, the counties of eastern North Carolina—cut by many unbridged rivers and streams— came more and more to realize that they were cut off from the new age by a great lack of transportation facilities. Ancient ferries crossed the Chowan and Roanoke rivers at scattered points. They had served for centuries to carry the buggies, the carts, the wagons, that constituted land transportation. But, with the coming of the automobile, they were inadequate, woefully. The first autos showed up in the area in the first and second decades of the 20th century, The high-bodied Tin Lizzies navigated along roads that had served in the horsedrawn past, but were completely inadequate in the new age. Dusty in summer, seas of muddy ruts in winter, they provided much reason for the many jokes about road difficulties in these booming days. Then, after the First World War, local people—and the state government—took the transportation bull by the horns. The 1920’s were the great roadbuilding pioneer days. In these years, local people banded together to provide themselves with a transportation network. Set back by the Depression of the early 1930’s, the roadbuilding pro grams spurted ahead again in the middle part of the decade when the state took over the job and continued the task of laying hardtop roads, and of building bridges to span the rivers. As the Second World War approached, most of the major highways had been paved, bridges had ended the river-caused isolation. But the farmer was still in the mud. Miles of rural roads were still in essentially the same condition they had been when the century began. The war put off the next roadbuilding era. Then, in 1949, a new Governor—W. Kerr Scott—took over Tar Heel government. A new spirit gripped local people. In a great spurt of roadbuilding, the miles of rutted rural roads became surfaced. “Scott Roads” opened a new era for rural Hertford and other farm counties. This is the story of the Age of Roads in Hertford County: How did Hertford County com missioners react to the new ’‘good roads” policy of Gov. Cameron Morrison’s 1921 administration? Not so good. The first problem which faced them was the decision on whether to switch from having road work supervised by the separate town ships, or put under county direc tion. The Hertford County Herald of January 28, 1921 reported: ‘‘County commissioners met but took no action on changing road work from townships to county.” Ip. successive issues, The Herald’s editorial stand urged the commissioners lo join the rest of the stale in this move. When it finally came to vote on February 11, 1921, The Herald recorded the fact that two of the six commissioners voted against the change. F. G. Tayloe of Ahoskie Town ship and J. O. Askew .Harrells- ville, were voted down, by a mar gin of 4 to 2. hiring a county superintendent of roads, which they did. Next move came on the state level, when the General Assembly was asked to approve a bill au thorizing a bond issue for road work, if approved by a referen dum of voters. Sen. W. H, S. Bui’gwyn of Northampton County, with Sen. Stanley Winborne and Rep. D. C. Barnes of Hertford County, were adamant in their opposition to this “good roads bill.” But it passed, nonetheless. the proposed state bond issue, State Highway Commissioner Hart of Tarboro and Miss Hattie Berry of Chapel Hill appeared at a “good roads”‘ rally in Winton June 15, 1921. County Group As a result, a county highway commission was set up. to hold monthly meetings in V/inlon, This commi.ssion was re.sponsible for Winton Bridge On May 6, 1921, The Herald an nounced that construction of a bridge over the Chowan River at Winton would be financed from the $1,500,000 appropriated to Hertford County out of the state bond issue, if approved. On June 10, 1921, the follow- , ing road improvement.s were an- jnounced as planned from the state 1 bond issue; A direct route from ■ Ahoskie to Aulander; from Ahos- , kio to Murfreesboro; and a road I for the section beyond St. John’s, I where the Aulandcr-Rich Square j road intCT.sected a Hertford Coun- I ty road. ' To push for public approval of "NEW" BRIDGE—I^'hen it was constructed in the late 1930’s, Ahoskie’s Memorial Drive read and overpa^js was one of the Koanokc Ciic'.vaii’^ most advanced transportation arteries. For nearly a decade ai-.-r it was built, the road and the railroad overpass were known as the “new bridge.” The road and bridge wore n’ meet “Memorial Drive and Bridge” after the Second World War. This photograph shows the ‘'new” bridge a few days after ii was finished. At this meeting, Hart said his chief ambition was to have his name on a bridge at Winton, which he said “would redeem the ‘Lost Colony’ of North Carolina.” referring to all the far northeast ern counties beyond the Chowan. Miss Berry appeared at another rally in Ahoskie, with State High way Commissioner Chaima i Page, later that summer. T^icrJt she said that the road materials available in Hertford County were unusually good for this part of the state, and that drainage should bo adequate and easy to maintain. So the slate went to the polls in August, to vote on the propos ed bond issue. It carried over whelmingly in most counties. In Hertford County, only Ahoskie Township voted it down by a margin of 23 more against than for. It was estimated that sand-and- asphalt roads in this county would cost $15,000 per mile to build. Bridge Opened In October. 1922, with appi'opri- ate fanfare and a barbecue meant for 58 person.s (150 were present) the first ali-steel bridge in.Hert ford County was opened. This spanned the Wiccacon River west of Harrellsville,' and replaced a ferry known as “Boone Harrell’s ferry” which had op erated there at least as early as the Revolutionary War, The automobile wa.s here to stay, and the roads had to keep up with it. In February, 1923, the contract was let for a road from Aulander to Winton, through Ahoskie. Nelio Teer bid $73,573.50 for do ing drainage, grading and gravel ing. T. E, Galloway bid $35,983 to build the bridges on the road. This news was greeted with glad tidings from The Herald, where the late J. Roy Parker wrote: “A few of the faithful Fords are still plodding the mud, fording the streams and tearing their entrails out trying to get their chauffeurs from place to place.” But the gaiety wa,5 short-lived, for when highway funds were al located four years later, in 1927, Hertford County got none.. In fact, the road from Aulander to Winton was the sum total of im provements made until 1934. In that year. Dr. T. E. Browne of Murfreesboro, who -was then director of vocational education for the state, mentioned the “very run-down condition” of second ary roads in the state, in a speech made in the county. The county commissioners sec onded his views, with a resolu tion passed August 9, .1934. In it, they called for paving of highway 12 from the Virginia lino through Murfreesboro, and of highway 35 from Winton to Harrellsville. For some reason, this got results, and the con tract was let to pave highway 12 on October 18, 1934. But Ahoskie, the fastest grow ing town in the county, was still ■‘in the mud.” In December, 1934, a delega tion went to Raleigh, where they appeared before the state high way commission ciiairman, Capus Waynick. They asked for paving of the highway from Ahoskie to Poweilsville. The folks at Pow- ellsville hoped either to have ac cess to a main highway through Colei'ain to Edenton, or through Ahoskie to Norfolk. SYMBOL OF A NEW ERA—The modern lines of a steel bridge spanned Meherrin River at Murfreesboro in the late 1920’s, re placing an old timber brid.ge which had served in the days of the horse and buggy, The bridge joined a wooden causeway (background) across low ground on the Maney’s Neck shore. Timber from the old wooden bridge was used in houses built in Murfreesboro during the period. The Meherrin steel bridge was one of several major transportation facilities built in Hertford County in this period when roadbuilding was opening a new era of transportation and ending the isolation that had caused the area to be called "The Lost Provinces” of North Carolina. Winton Good Roads Meeting Signal For Start in State Roads Program BEFORE BRIDGES—Tin.' was Wintoji’s Chowan River cros.siag in the eaj'ly 19:10 For more than 200 years, iciTy liuU? operated across the river at this point, Note the Tin Lizzie automobile. When it came, the e..',-- uf the ferry was doomed and the Roanoke-Chowan was lifted from its transportation i.-ulation by (he construction of liridgos. The iiictiire was taken from the Winfon shore as the cable ferrv rolled into dock. A Hot Fight This soon produced the hottest fight seen in a long time. One group, represented by Mayor Lloyd J. Lawrence of Murfrees boro, wanted a road from Cole- rain to Harrellsville to Winton, Another protested this would cut Ahoskie off, and wanted the route from Coierain to Powells- vilie to Ahoskie. Lawrence thundered that this 'wa.s a move which would lead to moving the courthouse to Ahos kie, dire thought! The Herald in June, 1935, re ported “several communities up in arms and threatening Ahos kie with trade boycotts in the mad scramble for roads.” But the highway commission was at last swayed by the size of Ahoskie and the determination of the women’s leaders in Poweils ville, and by fall of 1935, had an nounced they would pave the road by that route “within a year.” Meanwhile, the last promise from the 1921 bond issue had bogged down'in 1933. A section of road from St. John’.s to Mcnoli had been pavec in 1931, but no funds were appro priated in 1933 for that kind of paving. By 1935. the St. John’, residents were still waiting for the rest of the connecting link from Menoia to Woodland. During the next decade, even the Menola-Woodiand link was completed, to finish the projects started in 1921, By the spring of 1949, however; roads were in a bad way again , secondary roads, this time. Farm-! ers were stuck on the back roads.' unable to get to the main hard-! surfaced routes. This wa.s the theme of Kerr Scott’s campaign, to be Governor, and it wa.s the farnrors who voted him in, in hopes of getting better secondary roads. ' One of the most anticipated | roads was that proposed to link I See MIXED, Page 2 | WINTON—“Three hundred and sixteen-years before the coming of Christ the Roman people had good roads,” said Chairman Wal ter Hart of the newly-appointed State Highway Commission in his speech in 1921, “but our people today hav'e no means to transport j iheir produce to market.” I The occasion was a meeting of i ciuzen.s at Winton interested in the North Carolina Good Roads I Association, urging the county to ! vote for issuance of $500,000 in I bonds for road work. And roads, I together with schools, were the I major concern of Hertford County I and the state in the post-World ' War I era. i The plea for good roads in the I twentieth century was only an I echo of the sentiments that had : prevailed long before the found- I ing of Hetrford County, almost . 200 years before. Anglican priests, ; forced to travel by Indian trails I and paths through the wilderness of North Carolina, had complain ed to the Lords Proprietor as early as 1679 that it was prae- Lically impos.5ibIe to move about I ovei'land. I The Lord.s Proprietor, in turn, I complained to the English govern- I ment that colonial governors were I not opening roads fast enough to ; encourage settlement south of Al- , bemarle Sound. The rich planters of the tide- 1 water areas not only needed ; means of transporting their tar, ■ pitch, cotton and corn to shipping , points, but needed roads as a means of fleeing possible Indian attacks. North Carolina laws of the first quarter of the 18lh century re flected the concern of the people over the bad roads and wide ox- pansc.s of unbridged waters. New Bern was completed about 1722. By some chance, Capus Way- nick notes in his book “North Carolina Roads and Their Build ers,” North Carolina has started strong road improvement drives around the fifteenth year of each century. The first such push occur red about 1715, and the second one exactly a century later. In 1815, Archibald D. Murphey, .state senator from Orange County, offered the resolution in the Gen eral Assembly that “it is expedi ent to provide more efficiently for the improvement of the inland navigation of the state.” This was shrewdly worded, both to catch the support of eastern legislators concerned with water travel, and of western legislators concerned more with road.s. In his 1819 “Memoir on internal improvements,” Murphey outlined a comprehensive plan for a state wide transportation system. He insisted the state would not ad vance without development of marketing centers to which farm ers could move- produce without great difficulty. Murphey wa.s named to -vs-hat may be considered North Caro lina’s first “highway commission.” His group wa.s to proceed with an engineering survey. The chairman, Peter Browne, was sent to England in 1818 to find a competent engineer, and accordingly hired Hamilton Ful ton at a salary of 1200 pounds, yearly. Within a short lime, how-' ever, the legislature was manipu lating members of the commission to force Fulton out. Fulton thought three pliases of Murphey’s suggestions w’ere feasi ble: a few main state roads; a net work of roads for county control; and a -feeder road system kept up by private land owners. The large eastern planters would not support a plan so dem ocratic, widespread and costly, however, and what followed at public expense was done by sub- .sidizing navigation companies and other private ventures. Partly as a result of what might be considered virtual civil war in North Carolina before, the Rev olutionary War, large numbers of persons were emigrating west ward over the mountains to Ten nessee and Kentucky. Notice of this continuing, weakening emi gration was taken in Raleigh at the “Internal Improvements Con vention” held in December, 1838. After making recommendations about state participation in rail roads and transportation compa nies, the group asked: “Again, we ask, can you hesitate? We tell you the spirit of improvement ' is abroad in the land- -to burst the shackles of a jealous and short sighted policy, to rise triumphant over physical obstacles and the still stronger mounds of local prejudice, and by your action to elevate our beloved state to her proper rank as one of the political members of this great confeder acy, and lot her shine with a new light amid the states of uur na tional galaxy.” Making a trip overland through North Carutina continued to be a major feat. Obser\'ani travelers who did not allow the bad ruad.'t lo di.scourage them from passing through the .state', coinmeiited on I valuable crops rotting in North 1 Carolina fields for lack of means to move them to market. In 1848, Gov. William A. Gra ham suggested that use of “plank” roads be studied. As a result, some middle and western counties built “turnpikes” of plank.s laid as a foundation for topsoil. Interest waned again, and not until 1879 did the modern movement for bet ter public roads evidence itself in the passage of the Mecklenburg road law. This law proyided for working of public roads (at first in Meck lenburg County only) partly by taxing and partly by the old labor system. The tax revenue was to be not less than seven cents or more than 20 cent.s on the $100 worth of property, and a labor as sessment of four days for all able- bodied citizens between the ages of 18 and 45 was to be made, with management in the h:tnds of township authorities. It was Februaiy. 1893, however, j before the North Carolina Road ! Improvement Association was or- jganized and the old Roman prin- j ciples of drainage and construc- ition were revived a.s suggestions. 'State Geologist Cain told the group of the “importance of grad- ; ing and draining tire public roads ' properly, by rai.sing the roadbeds above the water flow and putting \ .stone di'ctins iiiicler them and , alongside them." ! The type of road construction , initialed by the Scotch engineer, j MacAdam. met with great suc- ;cess in the United Slates during , the latter half of the 19th century. I I^ecause "nuicadam” roads used See WINTON, Page 6 Cheshire Permil A permit to keep a ferry over , the Meherrin River near its junc- i tion with the Chowan River was obtained by John Cheshire in. 1718, the expres.-; purpo.-^e of the | utility being the convenience of intercolonial lra\ t;l. Rccau.sc the colonics were jeal-i ous of their exports, each had; high tariffs against produce com ing from neighboring colonies. Ferry keepers were assigned the; duty of requiring passports for' all persons carrying the colony's borders. ; dim, The fir.'t interstate road prob- ' ably ran from the head of naviga ' tion on the Porquiman.s River to! Suffolk. A second ran through ' Currituck towards Norfolk and aj third connected the Roanoke Riv- , er with points in Virginia. A main i road to the Governor’s office in i -s--.-r! STREET PAVING—Vila th-- -ra the automobile causing unprecedented demand lor road- building, Hcrltoul County towns were also ready for the new eia. Street paving projects in mbst communities began in the 1920’s, This view is of Ahoskie’s West Main Sired (looking Inward midtown) as it was just before hardtop went down in 1925.